Defendant-Appellant Don Blake appeals the district court’s denial of his Fed. R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss based on qualified immunity. Officer Blake contends that the district court erred by (1) holding that Plaintiff-Appellee Aundra Anderson possessed a constitutionally protected privacy interest in the contents of a video depicting her alleged rape, (2) holding that Ms. Anderson’s constitutional privacy interest was clearly established, and (3) consequently rejecting Officer Blake’s contention that he is entitled to qualified immunity from suit. Our jurisdiction arises under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, and we affirm.
Background
Ms. Anderson’s claims arise out of the publication of a videotape depicting her alleged rape, which was disclosed to a television reporter and aired on a local news broadcast in Oklahoma City. Aplt. Br. at 2-3. She alleges she was the victim of a rape that occurred while she was unconscious, and that she later discovered a video documenting the rape. Id. After discovering the video, she reported the rape to Officer Blake, a detective with the City of Norman Police Department and turned the video over to him. Id. at 3. Ms. Anderson alleged that Officer Blake promised her that the video would remain confidential and would be used only for law enforcement purposes. Aplt.App. at 18 (Comply 22).
Sometime thereafter, Officer Blake disclosed the contents of the video to a reporter named Kimberly Lohman and her cameraman, both of whom work for KOCO-TV, a television station based in Oklahoma City. Aplt. Br. at 3; Aplee. Br. at 11. Ms. Anderson alleges that the officer contacted her by phone and handed the line to Lohman who attempted to interview her about the details of her rape. Aplee. Br. at 11. Later, the television station aired portions of the video in a *913 manner that obscured Ms. Anderson’s identity during a news broadcast. Aplt. Br. at 3. Ms. Anderson alleges that there was no law enforcement purpose in defendant’s release of the video. Aplee. Br. at 3.
The district court denied Officer Blake’s motion to dismiss.
Anderson v. Blake,
No. Civ-05-0729-HE,
Relying on
Sheets v. Salt Lake County,
Discussion
An order denying qualified immunity that raises purely legal issues is immediately appealable.
See Johnson v. Fankell,
“The doctrine of qualified immunity shields public officials ... from damage actions unless their conduct was unreasonable in light of clearly established law.”
Elder v. Holloway,
To be clearly established, the contours of a right must be “sufficiently clear that a reasonable official would understand that what he is doing violates that right.”
Hope v. Pelzer,
I. Privacy Interest in the Contents of the Video
The district court held that Ms. Anderson had a constitutionally protected privacy interest in the contents of the video because of its “personal nature.”
Anderson,
Ms. Anderson possesses a constitutionally protected privacy interest in the video because it depicts the most private of matters: namely her body being forcibly violated. As the Sixth Circuit noted, “[p]ub-lically revealing information regarding [sexuality and choices about sex] exposes an aspect of our lives that we regard as highly personal and private.”
Bloch v. Ribar,
While there is no case in this circuit addressing whether a video depicting a rape may be within the right to privacy, it is not surprising, given our precedent, that we should reach such a conclusion. If a person has a legitimate expectation of privacy in a diary, in undressing before a guard, or in answering questions concerning sexual history, certainly a person has a reasonable expectation that a video of his or her rape will not be aired to thousands in a public news broadcast. In
Bloch,
the Sixth Circuit held that oral disclosure to the press of the intimate details of a rape violates the constitutional right to privacy absent a compelling government justification for disclosure.
Despite this authority, Officer Blake argues that the video is not protected by the right to privacy because it contains evidence of a crime. He relies on
Cawood v. Haggard,
Officer Blake argues that Cawood should be read as excluding from privacy protection any otherwise personal information that contains evidence of criminal conduct, regardless of whether the party asserting the right to privacy is the one alleged to have committed a crime. Aplt. Br. at 10. He also argues that, like Ca-wood, the video here was bound to be made public at a trial of the perpetrator in this case, or in other cases in which the perpetrator might be charged. Id. at 8.
This is too broad a reading of
Cawood.
Cases must be read against their facts, and an obvious and critical difference between
Cawood
and this case is that Ms. Anderson is the
victim
of the crime depicted, not the perpetrator. While validly enacted laws place people on notice that engaging in certain conduct is not within the right to privacy,
see Mangels,
To be sure, private information that otherwise would be protected by the right to privacy may nevertheless be disclosed if the government can demonstrate a compelling interest and if it uses the least intrusive means of disclosure.
Sheets,
Officer Blake also suggests that because the video would have been inevitably disclosed at trial, it is beyond any legitimate expectation of privacy.
2
Again, Officer Blake asks us to ignore the fact specific nature of the
Sheets
test. Because there is an “individual interest in avoiding disclosure,”
id.
at 1387, the inevitable disclosure of the video at trial does not necessarily justify its release at the time and in the manner it was disclosed. Moreover, we cannot' assume inevitable disclosure consistent with our obligation to accept all of Ms. Anderson’s well-pleaded factual allegations as true and view them in a light most favorable to her. As it stands, Officer Blake cannot establish, based on the pleadings alone, that disclosure was inevitable. As the district court noted, “[g]iven the nature of what is alleged to have been depicted on the tape, it is entirely possible that the criminal charges against plaintiffs attacker might have been resolved without a trial.”
Anderson,
Officer Blake may yet articulate a compelling government interest for disclosing the video to the public and justify the manner of its disclosure. But at this point, aside from his argument that the video would be inevitably disclosed as part of a criminal prosecution, none appears in the district court pleadings properly considered on a motion to dismiss. In her complaint, Ms. Anderson alleges that no legitimate government interest existed for disclosure because the identity of the alleged perpetrator was already known by Officer Blake at the time the video was disclosed. Aplt.App. at 24 (Comply 38). Officer Blake argues in his reply brief that another victim of the plaintiffs alleged attacker came forth after the airing of the video, and that, as a result, airing of the video “may have caused additional victims to come forth.” Aplt. Reply Br. at 5-6. He, admits, however, that this “law enforcement reason” was not offered in the motion to dismiss because it is a matter outside the pleadings. Id. at 6. While this *917 reason may be considered in subsequent proceedings, we do not consider it at this juncture.
Relying on supplemental authority submitted prior to oral argument,
see Stidham v. Peace Officer Stds. & Training,
II. Privacy Interest as Clearly Established
To defeat defendant’s qualified immunity claim, Ms. Anderson must also demonstrate that her privacy interest in the video was clearly established at the time the officer disclosed it.
See Mimics, Inc. v. Village of Angel Fire,
We think Ms. Anderson’s privacy interest in the video (as challenged by Officer Blake in his motion to dismiss) was clearly established based on
Sheets, Eastwood, Mangels,
and
Cumbey,
all decided before the events here. These cases were sufficiently clear to the Sixth Circuit that it relied on them to form the basis of its holding in
Bloch,
also decided before the events here. These cases must be considered in the context of the Supreme Court’s holding in
Hope
that a general constitutional rule that has already been established can “apply with obvious clarity to the specific conduct in question, even though the very action in question has [not] previously been held unlawful.”
Because the district court relied primarily on
Sheets,
Officer Blake attempts to draw distinctions between
Sheets
and this case to demonstrate that Ms. Anderson’s privacy interest was not clearly established. He distinguishes
Sheets
on three grounds: (1) the information conveyed in
Sheets
was linked to a spousal relationship, (2) the diary in
Sheets
was not evidence that could have been used in a criminal trial, (3) the disclosure in
Sheets
occurred after the criminal investigation had ended. Aplt. Br. at 13. While these factual distinctions between
Sheets
and the instant case are correct, they do not change the result here. Our cases
do not
indicate that information must be linked to a spousal relationship to be within the right to privacy. Instead, we have repeatedly held that whether information is within the right to privacy depends on the “intimate or otherwise personal nature of the material which the state possesses.”
Sheets,
We recognize that a plaintiff alleging improper disclosure of private information
*918
must also demonstrate that a defendant lacked a compelling interest to disclose the information and did not utilize the least intrusive means of disclosure.
3
But we think Ms. Anderson has satisfied her burden at this stage of the proceedings. Her complaint alleged “[t]here was no compelling law enforcement or public interest that permitted the disclosure, release, and broadcast of the tape at this stage of the investigation ... in that the identity of the Attacker was already well known to the Police Department and Defendant Blake.” Aplt.App. at 24 (Comply 38). The complaint also asserts that the disclosure and broadcast of the tape “were not accomplished in the least intrusive manner....”
Id.
The motion to dismiss did not address these allegations. At this stage of the proceedings, we will not require Ms. Anderson to disprove every possible compelling interest that Officer Blake
might
assert when he does not move for qualified immunity on this basis.
See Currier v. Doran,
III. Plaintiffs Alternative Request for Leave to Amend
Ms. Anderson included a request for leave to amend in her response to defendant’s motion to dismiss. ApltApp. at 72-73. She attempted to preserve this request in her response brief before this court. Aplee. Br. at 6-7. She essentially seeks to amend her complaint to clarify allegations of procedural due process violations that were “not well-stated” in the complaint, id. at 7, and which became more apparent following the limited discovery that took place after Officer Blake filed his motion to dismiss, id. at 8-10.
The attempted procedural due process claim rests on Officer Blake’s alleged deviation from the City of Norman’s internal disclosure procedures and the Oklahoma Open Records Act. Id. at 9. There is no reference to either the internal procedures or the state statute in the complaint. It appears that Ms. Anderson only considered the procedural due process claim after Officer Blake filed his motion to dismiss. Id. at 7.
“As a general rule an appellate court does not consider an issue not passed upon below.”
Lowe v. Town of Fairland,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Officer Blake’s brief relies on some facts that were not alleged in his motion to dismiss. Because our review is confined to the pleadings, we do not consider those facts. If a defendant wishes to raise a qualified immunity argument based on facts outside the pleadings, he may do so in a motion for summary judgment.
See Walker v. City of Orem,
. Officer Blake asks us to follow
Cawood,
where the court expressly found that the video "was destined to become public.”
. We read
Sheets
to hold that a plaintiff has a constitutionally protected privacy interest in information when a plaintiff has a legitimate expectation of privacy in the information
and
when the defendant fails to show a compelling interest in disclosing the information and that it used the least intrusive means of disclosure.
