JULIET ANILAO, HARRIET AVILA, MARK DELA CRUZ, CLAUDINE GAMAIO, ELMER JACINTO, JENNIFER LAMPA, RIZZA MAULION, THERESA RAMOS, RANIER SICHON, AND JAMES MILLENA, Plaintiffs-Counter-Defendants-Appellants, FELIX Q. VINLUAN, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. THOMAS J. SPOTA, III, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS DISTRICT ATTORNEY OF SUFFOLK COUNTY, OFFICE OF THE DISTRICT ATTORNEY OF SUFFOLK COUNTY, LEONARD LATO, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS AN ASSISTANT DISTRICT ATTORNEY OF SUFFOLK COUNTY, COUNTY OF SUFFOLK, KARLA LATO, AS ADMINISTRATOR OF THE ESTATE OF LEONARD LATO, Defendants-Appellees, SUSAN O‘CONNOR, NANCY FITZGERALD, SENTOSA CARE, LLC, AVALON GARDENS REHABILITATION AND HEALTH CARE CENTER, PROMPT NURSING EMPLOYMENT AGENCY, LLC, FRANCRIS LUYUN, BENT PHILIPSON, BERISH RUBINSTEIN, Defendants-Counter-Claimants.
No. 19-3949-cv
United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit
March 9, 2022
August Term, 2020 (Argued: December 4, 2020)
Ten nurses and their former attorney filed claims under
Judge Chin dissents in a separate opinion.
STEPHEN L. O‘BRIEN, O‘Brien & O‘Brien, LLP, Nesconset, NY, for Defendant-Appellee Thomas J. Spota, III.
BRIAN C. MITCHELL, Assistant County Attorney, Suffolk County Attorney‘s Office, Hauppauge, NY, for Defendants-Appellees County of Suffolk and Karla Lato, as Administrator of the Estate of Leonard Lato.*
PAULA SCHWARTZ FROME (James O. Druker, on the brief), Kase & Druker, Esqs., Garden City, NY, for Plaintiffs-Counter-Defendants-Appellants Juliet Anilao, Harriet Avila, Mark Dela Cruz, Claudine Gamaio, Elmer Jacinto, Jennifer Lampa, Rizza Maulion, Theresa Ramos, Ranier Sichon, and James Millena.
LOHIER, Circuit Judge:
Ten nurses and their former attorney, Felix Vinluan, filed claims under
For the reasons that follow, we affirm the District Court‘s judgment. Although Spota and Lato may have unlawfully penalized the plaintiffs for
BACKGROUND
Sentosa Care, LLC (“Sentosa“)1 operates health care facilities throughout New York and recruited the nurse plaintiffs from the Philippines tо work in various Sentosa nursing home facilities on Long Island, New York. Each nurse signed an employment contract that required the nurses to work for at least three years or face a $25,000 penalty. When they arrived in New York, the nurses learned that they would be working for an employment agency, not Sentosa, and that the agency had assigned them to work at
Following a relatively brief stint at Avalon, the nurses began to complain about their working and living conditions — longer than expected work shifts, overcrowded and substandard housing, lower insurance benefits and pay, and less vacation time than their contracts provided. The nurses also voiced their concerns to the Philippine Consulate in New York, which referred them to Vinluan, an immigration and employment attorney, for advice. After speaking with the nurses and evaluating the facts, Vinluan concluded that Sentosa had breached its contracts with the nurses and advised them that they were free to resign from their positions without legal repercussion once their shifts ended. Based on Vinluan‘s advice, on April 7, 2006, all ten nurses resigned either after their shift was over or in advance of their next shift.
Soon after the nurses resigned, Sentosa filed a complaint with the New York State Department of Education, which licenses and regulates nurses. The company also filed a complaint in Nassau County Supreme Court to enjoin the nurses and Vinluan from speaking to other nurses about resigning.
Unfazed, Sentosa continued its campaign against the plaintiffs. It finally found a receptive audience in Spota. Not long after representatives of Sentosa met with Spota to urge the DA‘s Office to file criminal charges against the nurses for imperiling the health and safety of Avalon‘s patients, Spota assigned the criminal investigation to Lato. Lato then quickly interviewed the plaintiffs, as well as other witnesses, like Francris Luyun, the head of Sentosa‘s recruitment agency.
In defense of the plaintiffs, who were now plainly the targets of a criminal investigation, Vinluan presented Lato with “significant exculpatory information.” App‘x 55. Among other things, Vinluan pointed to the fact that the Department of Education and the New York State Supreme Court had declined to act against the nurses. He also provided “information . . .
Lato was unpersuaded by Vinluan‘s arguments and presented several witnesses to a grand jury in Suffolk County. Among the witnesses were several Sentosa employees, an investigator in the DA‘s Office, a nurse who had also resigned but who is not a party to this appeal, and a nurse who filled in at Avalon immediately after the nurse plaintiffs resigned. The grand jury returned an indictment charging the nurses and Vinluan with (1) conspiracy in the sixth degree, in violation of
In response, the nurses and Vinluan moved in New York State Supreme Court in Suffolk County to, among other things, dismiss the charges against them. All of them insisted that their conduct was not criminal and that, in any event, the indictment was not supported by sufficient evidence. They also argued that the prosecution violated their constitutional rights. The
The state court rejected the plaintiffs’ claims of insufficient evidence, holding that “the evidence [was] legally sufficient to support [all] the charges contained in the indictment” and “that each count of the indictment properly charges these defendants with a crime . . . .” App‘x 814.2 The court also rejected the plaintiffs’ constitutional arguments. With respect to the nurses’ constitutional challenge, the state court concluded that “[t]here is absolutely no evidence to suggest that this prosecution in any way violates the rights of any of these defendants under the Thirteenth Amendment to the United
Having failed to persuade the state court to dismiss the indictment against them, the plaintiffs petitioned the New York Appellate Division, Second Department for a writ of prohibition. See
The plaintiffs started this federal litigation in 2010. The complaint alleges, among other things, that Spota and Lato acted in concert with Sentosa to secure an indictment that they knew violated the plaintiffs’ constitutional rights and that they lacked probable cause to bring in the first instance. In particular, the complaint asserts that “the Grand Jury was not properly charged as to the law,” was “falsely informed that one or more of the nurses had resigned and left the facility before completing his or her shift,” and was
The defendants filed a motion to dismiss the complaint under
But the District Court declined to dismiss on absolute immunity grounds the plaintiffs’ claims arising from any alleged prosecutorial
DISCUSSION
The two questions presented on appeal are whether Spota and Lato were entitled to absolute immunity for the actions they undertook as prosecutors, and whether there was any evidence showing that they violated the plaintiffs’ constitutional rights during the investigative phase of the prosecution, a phase with respect to which they are entitled at most only to qualified immunity. We address each question in turn.
I
The doctrine of absolute immunity applies broadly to shield a prosecutor from liability for money damages (but not injunctive relief) in a
“Thus, unless a prosecutor proceeds in the clear absence of all jurisdiction, absolute immunity [from
A narrow limitation to the scope of absolute immunity in
So “[e]ven if a prosecutor may lose his absolute immunity for prosecutorial acts for which he has no colorable claim of authority,” it is not lost “immediately upon crossing the technical bounds of the power conferred on him by local law,” or “simply because he acted in excess of his authority.” Lerwill, 712 F.2d at 439; see Ashleman v. Pope, 793 F.2d 1072, 1076–77 (9th Cir. 1986) (en banc) (unanimously holding that prosecutor was entitled to absolute immunity after overruling prior Ninth Circuit holding that prosecutor who “files charges he or she knows to be baseless . . . is acting outside the scope of his or her authority and thus lacks immunity” (quotation marks omitted)). Instead, “absolute immunity must be denied” only where there is both the absence of all authority (because, for example, no statute authorizes the prosecutor‘s conduct) and the absence of any doubt that the
These governing principles of law are well established and are not questioned by the parties on appeal — so much so that the plaintiffs recognize that the doctrine of absolute immunity creates a “formidable obstacle” to their cause of action. Appellants’ Br. at 29 (quotation marks
We start with our decision in Barr. There the plaintiff had been questioned by the State prosecutor‘s office as part of an investigation into alleged violations of state securities law. The plaintiff refused to answer any questions and invoked his Fifth Amendment right to remain silent. See 810 F.2d at 359–60. In response, the prosecutors charged the plaintiff with criminal contempt in violation of New York‘s penal law. See id. at 360. The contempt charge was eventually dismissed in state court on the ground that the plaintiff had merely exercised his Fifth Amendment right. Id. The plaintiff then filed a
Likewise, in Bernard we considered whether county prosecutors were entitled to absolute immunity for their politically motivated investigation and
In Shmueli, decided a year after Bernard, we held that absolute immunity applied to protect local prosecutors who engaged in conduct that, if it occurred, was nothing short of outrageous. The plaintiff alleged that two New York County Assistant District Attorneys maliciously prosecuted her for aggravated harassment of her former domestic partner “despite knowing that the charges against her were false and that [she] was innocent” of those charges. 424 F.3d at 233. The plaintiff also alleged that the prosecutors made several threatening phone calls to her home during the prosecution. Id. at 233-34. The district court rejected the prosecutors’ defense of absolute immunity because they acted “without clear jurisdiction and without any colorable claim of authority.” Id. at 235. We reversed, holding that the district court had improperly “equat[ed] an allegedly improper prosecutorial state of mind with a lack of prosecutorial jurisdiction.” Id. Absolute immunity, we explained, shielded the prosecutors’ conduct because the
We have extended absolute immunity to prosecutorial misconduct that was arguably more reprehensible than the conduct in Shmueli. See, e.g., Pinaud v. County of Suffolk, 52 F.3d 1139, 1148 (2d Cir. 1995) (granting
The lessons and holdings of Barr, Bernard, and Shmueli are hard to escape in this case. There is no dispute on appeal that the District Attorney was authorized by statute to prosecute the plaintiffs for endangering children and physically disabled persons, for conspiring to do the same, and for soliciting others to do so.8 Neither the dissent nor the plaintiffs propose that
resignations at other Sentosa Care facilities would render it difficult for Avalon Gardens to find, in a timely manner, skilled replacement nurses for Avalon Gardens’ pediatric patients, particularly the terminally ill JB, the child NL and the ventilated children NC, BC, TM and TT.“). It is not enough to criticize, as the dissent does, the manner in which the prosecutors performed their “quintessential prosecutorial functions” of evaluating the evidence and initiating a criminal prosecution. Shmueli, 424 F.3d at 237. As we have already noted, absolute immunity “attaches to [the prosecutor‘s] function” or task, “not the manner in which he performed it.” Dory, 25 F.3d at 83 (quoting Barrett v. United States, 798 F.2d 565, 573 (2d Cir. 1986)); see also Buckley v. Fitzsimmons, 509 U.S. 259, 273 (1993) (explaining that a prosecutor‘s “professional evaluation of the evidence” is protected by absolute immunity); Bernard, 356 F.3d at 505. And “whether a given prosecution was clearly beyond the scoрe of the prosecutor‘s jurisdiction” or function, “and so whether absolute immunity applies, depends on ‘whether the pertinent statutes may have authorized prosecution for the charged conduct.‘” Shmueli, 424 F.3d at 237. In this case, even the Appellate Division acknowledged that, under New York law, “an employee‘s abandonment of his or her post in an ‘extreme case’ may constitute an exceptional circumstance which warrants infringement upon the right to freely leave employment.” Vinluan, 873 N.Y.S.2d at 81. There can be no serious dispute under New York law that the claim of child endangerment was at least a colorable one that the prosecutors had authority to charge.
In advancing their argument, the plaintiffs take their cue from the state appellate court‘s earlier conclusion in this case that “no facts suggesting an imminent threat to the well being of the children have been alleged.” Vinluan, 873 N.Y.S.2d at 82. They also argue that Spota and Lato knew or should have known at the outset of the case that their prosecution of the plaintiffs was constitutionally infirm. But fundamentally, in our view, these arguments relate to the existence or absence of probable cause — not, as Barr, Bernard, and Shmueli instruct us to consider, the defendants’ statutory authority to pursue the prosecution in the first place. As already noted, under our precedent absolute immunity shields Spota and Lato for their prosecutorial and advocative conduct even in the absence of probable cause and even if their conduct was entirely politically motivated. See, e.g., Shmueli, 424 F.3d at 237–38 (improper motive does not factor into absolute immunity analysis);9 accord Bernard, 356 F.3d at 505; see also Buckley v.
Thе Appellate Division‘s issuance of a writ of prohibition complicates but does not change our decision. The writ, rarely used, applies only to end a prosecution, not to undo what the prosecution has already done. United States v. Hoffman, 71 U.S. 158, 161–62 (1867) (“[T]he only effect of a writ of prohibition is to suspend all action, and to prevent any further proceeding in
[A] defense of absolute immunity from a claim for damages must be upheld against a
§ 1983 claim that the prosecutor commenced and continued a prosecution that was within his jurisdiction but did so for purposes of retaliation, or for purely political reasons. A prosecutor is also entitled to absolute immunity despite allegations of his knowing use of perjured testimony and the deliberate withholding of exculpatory information. Although such conduct would be reprehensible, it does not make the prosecutor amenable to a civil suit for damages. In sum, the nature of absolute immunity is such that it accords protection from any judicial scrutiny of the motive for and reasonableness of official action. These principles are not affected by allegations that improperly motivated prosecutions were commenced or continued pursuant to a conspiracy.
424 F.3d at 237–38 (cleaned up).
This case is practically indistinguishable from Barr, in which the state court issued a writ of prohibition and dismissed criminal contempt charges against the plaintiffs, but made clear that “contempt, if properly charged, in the context of the facts of this case is an underlying act of continuous concealment directly related to the securities fraud investigation, and therefore is within the jurisdiction of the Attorney General.” Barr, 810 F.2d at 362 (emphasis added). Similarly, the Appellate Division here noted that the criminal laws relating to the endangerment of children “do not on their face infringe upon
The plaintiffs urge us to adopt a new rule under which absolute immunity would no longer apply to cases “where a prosecution is unconstitutional” from the start, where the unconstitutional nature of the prosecution “was evident or should have been evident to the рrosecutor from the facts and the law, and where the prosecution is based upon evidence deliberately fabricated by the prosecutors.” Appellants’ Br. at 33. In inviting us to alter our approach to absolute immunity, the plaintiffs turn our attention to Fields v. Wharrie, 740 F.3d 1107 (7th Cir. 2014). There, the Seventh Circuit held that a prosecutor “acting pre-prosecution as an investigator” was not entitled to absolute immunity because he “fabricate[d] evidence” and eventually “introduce[d] the fabricated evidence at trial.” Id.
Our view, and the District Court‘s, is consistent with Fields. After all, the District Court determined that Spota and Lato were absolutely immune for their conduct as advocates during the judicial phase (initiating the prosecution, using allegedly perjured testimony during the grand jury, and making allegedly false statements to the grand jury), but held, as in Fields, that they were not immune for their conduct during the investigative stage of the prosecution. And Barr and Shmueli prevent us from accepting the plaintiffs’ invitation to further extend the exception to absolute immunity beyond Fields, to situations in which prosecutors during the advocacy phase bring charges they know violate an individual‘s constitutional rights. See Barr, 810 F.2d at 361; see also Shmueli, 424 F.3d at 238 (prosecutors are afforded absolute immunity for bringing charges that they knew were false
We therefore affirm the District Court‘s dismissal of the claims arising from the defendants’ actions taken in their role as advocates during the judicial phase of the prosecution. In doing so, “[w]e recognize, as Chief Judge Hand pointed out, that sometimes such immunity deprives a plaintiff of compensation that [she] undoubtedly merits.” Van de Kamp v. Goldstein, 555 U.S. 335, 348 (2009). “Especially in cases, such as the present one, in which a plaintiff plausibly alleges disgraceful behavior by district attorneys, the application of this doctrine is more than disquieting.” Pinaud v. County of Suffolk, 52 F.3d 1139, 1147 (2d Cir. 1995). “[B]ut the impediments to the fair, efficient functioning of a prosecutorial office that liability could create
II
The District Court concluded from the pleadings that Spota and Lato were not entitled to absolute immunity for their conduct during the investigative stage of the prosecution, and that the plaintiffs had stated a claim for relief that was plausible on its face under
We review a grant of summary judgment de novo. See Rivera v. Rochester Genesee Reg‘l Transp. Auth., 743 F.3d 11, 19 (2d Cir. 2014). “Summary judgment is appropriate only where, construing all the evidence in the light most favorable to the non-movant and drawing all reasonable
The District Court held that “Lato and Spota are entitled to summary judgment because . . . no rational jury could find that they knowingly fabricated evidence during the investigation, or otherwise violated plaintiffs’ constitutional rights in the investigative phase of this case.” Anilao II, 340 F. Supp. 3d at 250. Upon review of the record, we agree and affirm the District Court‘s grant of summary judgment.
On appeal, the plaintiffs, like our dissenting colleague, emphasize that there is at least a factual dispute as to whether Lato conspired with Sentosa to
This is, in our view, little more than speculation. As such it poses no bar to summary judgment in the defendants’ favor. Speculation aside, the plaintiffs fail to point to any admissible evidence that could lead a reasonable juror to conclude that Lato (or Spota) conspired with Luyun to fabricate еvidence.12 They had every opportunity to develop the record and to uncover
The plaintiffs separately rely on the plotline that the police refused to investigate the nurses despite having been urged to do so by Spota and Lato. At best, however, this implies that Spota and Lato had a very weak and decidedly unappealing case against the nurses, not that they conspired with Luyun to fabricate evidence to present to the grand jury, or that they otherwise clearly violated the plaintiffs’ constitutional rights during the investigation.
We briefly respond to the dissent‘s suggestion that racial prejudice triggered and infects this entire litigation. Our dissenting colleague understandably focuses a great deal of attention on the reprehensible conduct
permitted Lato to withhold from the grand jury the information that the dissent, like the рlaintiffs, claim he was obliged to disclose to that body.
Whatever its other faults,13 the most glaring problem with the dissent‘s view is that it is not shared by the plaintiffs, who have never embraced it at any point in this hard-fought and well-counseled litigation — not in the complaint, not on summary judgment, not even on appeal. “Few principles are better established in our Circuit than the rule that ‘arguments not made in an appellant‘s opening brief are waived even if the appellant pursued those arguments in the district court.‘” New York v. Dep‘t of Justice, 964 F.3d 150,
III
Finally, we turn to the County‘s liability under Monell v. Department of Social Services, 436 U.S. 658 (1978).
”Monell does not provide a separate cause of action for the failure by the government to train its employees; it extends liability to a municipal organization where that organization‘s failure to train, or the policies or customs that it has sanctioned, led to an independent constitutional violation.” Segal v. City of New York, 459 F.3d 207, 219 (2d Cir. 2006). In other words, a Monell claim cannot succeed without an independent constitutional violation. See id. “[I]nherent in the principle that a municipality can be liable under
With these principles in mind, we reject the plaintiffs’ first claim that the County is liable for the individual defendants’ conduct, including the fabrication of evidence, during the investigative stage. As discussed above, there was no evidence of a constitutional violation by the DA‘s Office at that stage, and we agree with the District Court that “the absence of any underlying constitutional violation arising from the conduct of Spota or Lato in the investigative stage” means that “no municipal liability can exist against Suffolk County” based on that conduct. Anilao II, 340 F. Supp. 3d at 251; see Askins v. Doe No. 1, 727 F.3d 248, 253-54 (2d Cir. 2013).
The plaintiffs separately also claim that the County is liable under Monell for Spota‘s alleged administrative mismanagement of the DA‘s Office. But we agree with the District Court that the plaintiffs have not provided the “direct causal link” we require under these circumstances between Spota‘s alleged mismanagement and the alleged misconduct and constitutional deprivations involving the plaintiffs. Outlaw, 884 F.3d at 373; see Anilao II, 340 F. Supp. 3d at 251 n.36. To the extent the plaintiffs’ claim centers on Spota‘s decision to prosecute the case rather thаn his management of the DA‘s Office, the claim fails because, in making that decision, Spota was clearly acting for New York State in a criminal matter, not for the County. See Ying Jing Gan, 996 F.2d at 536.14
CONCLUSION
We have considered the plaintiffs’ remaining arguments and conclude that they are without merit. For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the judgment of the District Court.
In this case, the Suffolk County District Attorney‘s Office (the “DA‘s Office“) brought criminal charges against ten nurses and their lawyer for “patient abandonment” because the nurses resigned their positions at a nursing home to protest their work conditions and the lawyer advised them of their rights and filed a discrimination claim on their behalf with the Department of Justice. The Appellate Division, Second Department, took the extraordinary step of issuing a writ of prohibition to bar the DA‘s Office from pursuing the charges, recognizing that the nurses and their attorney were “threatened with prosecution for crimes for which they [could not] constitutionally be tried.” Vinluan v. Doyle, 873 N.Y.S.2d 72, 83 (2d Dep‘t 2009) (Eng, J.). Indeed, as the Second Department held, “these criminal prosecutions constitute[d] an impermissible infringement upon the constitutional rights of these nurses and their attorney.” Id. at 75.
Yet, the district court held that the nurses and their lawyer were precluded from pursuing civil rights claims against the prosecutors because they acted within their jurisdiction and were therefore protected by the doctrines of absolute and qualified immunity. This Court now affirms. In my view, however, the complaint plausibly alleged, as the Second Department found, that
I.
The ten nurses were recruited in the Philippines to work at nursing homes in New York operated by Sentosa Care, LLC (“Sentosa“). After arriving in the United States, they commenced employment at the Avalon Gardens Rehabilitation and Health Care Center (“Avalon Gardens“), a 353-bed private nursing facility on Long Island. The nurses soon concluded that Sentosa had breached certain promises it had made to them and that Sentosa was treating them in an unfair and discriminatory manner. They contacted the Philippine Consulate, which referred them to Vincent Q. Vinluan, an attorney based in New York. Vinluan advised them that, in his view, Sentosa had breached its contract with them and that they could resign to protest their poor work conditions, but that they should not do so until after completing their shifts. He filed a claim of
Sentosa complained to various authorities. In April 2006, it filed a complaint with the Suffolk County Police Department, which declined to take action after investigating the matter. Sentosa also brought suit against the nurses and Vinluan in the Supreme Court of the State of New York, Nassau County, seeking a preliminary injunction. The court denied the motion in July 2006, finding that Sentosa had failed to establish a likelihood of success on the merits. And the Office of Professional Discipline of the State Education Department (“DOE“), the entity with licensing jurisdiction over the nurses, investigated and concluded that the nurses’ “conduct did not constitute patient abandonment“; it closed the investigation in October 2006 without taking any disciplinary action. App‘x at 1280.
Sentosa then turned to the DA‘s Office and was able to obtain a personal meeting with then-Suffolk County District Attorney Thomas J. Sрota
The nurses and Vinluan brought an Article 78 proceeding in state court seeking a writ of prohibition to stop the prosecutions. On January 13, 2009, the Second Department granted the writ -- prohibiting the DA‘s Office from proceeding with the prosecutions. See Vinluan, 873 N.Y.S.2d at 83.
Thereafter, the nurses and Vinluan brought this action below against the County of Suffolk (the “County“), Spota, and former Assistant District Attorney Leonard Lato,2 seeking damages pursuant to
This appeal followed.
II.
I address first the issue of absolute immunity.
I agree with the majority that prosecutors enjoy broad absolute immunity from liability for “prosecutorial activities intimately associated with the judicial phase of the criminal process.” Barr v. Abrams, 810 F.2d 358, 361 (2d Cir. 1987). I acknowledge that this protection extends to “virtually all acts, regardless of motivation, associated with [the prosecutor‘s] function as an advocate.” Hill v. City of New York, 45 F.3d 653, 661 (2d Cir. 1995) (internal quotation marks omitted). Still, the rule is not without exception. As this Court has explained:
A [prosecutor] engaged in advocative functions will be denied absolute immunity only if he acts without any colorable claim of authority. The appropriate inquiry, thus, is not whether аuthorized acts are performed with a good or bad motive, but whether the acts at
issue are beyond the prosecutor‘s authority. Accordingly, where a prosecutor is sued under § 1983 for constitutional abuse of his discretion to initiate prosecutions, a court will begin by considering whether relevant statutes authorize prosecution for the charged conduct. If they do not, absolute immunity must be denied. But if the laws do authorize prosecution for the charged crimes, a court will further consider whether the [prosecutor] has intertwined his exercise of authorized prosecutorial discretion with other, unauthorized conduct. For example, where a prosecutor has linked his authorized discretion to initiate or drop criminal charges to an unauthorized demand for a bribe, sexual favors, or the defendant‘s performance of a religious act, absolute immunity has been denied.
Bernard v. County of Suffolk, 356 F.3d 495, 504 (2d Cir. 2004) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). Hence, “where a prosecutor acts without any colorable claim of authority, he loses the absolute immunity he would otherwise enjoy.” Barr, 810 F.2d at 361; accord Shmueli v. City of New York, 424 F.3d 231, 237 (2d Cir. 2005).
Here, the question is whether plaintiffs plausibly alleged in their complaint that Spota and Lato proceeded without any colorable claim of authority. I believe they did.
As a threshold matter, what does it mean for a prosecutor to act “without any colorable claim of authority?” I do not think that all a prosecutor need do, to be absolutely immune, is to cite a criminal statute and assert that a defendant violated it. That is what the majority essentially suggests, as it
The indictment here charged the nurses and Vinluan with conspiracy in the sixth degree,3 five counts of endangering the welfare of a child,4 and six counts of endangering the welfare of a physically disabled person,5 and it also charged Vinluan with criminal solicitation in the fifth
Additionally, the bringing of these charges was beyond the prosecutors’ authority, see Bernard, 356 F.3d at 504, for as a factual matter the indictment charged only legally permissible conduct. For example, the indictment alleged that:
14. It was the conspiracy‘s objective to obtain for the Avalon Gardens’ nurses alternative employment and a release from their three-year commitment to Sentosa Care without incurring a financial penalty of $25,000.
15. In pursuit of their objective, the defendant [Vinluan] and the defendant nurses sought to establish that Sentosa Care had breached the contracts and had discriminated against the nurses.
App‘x at 1404-05. These were not criminal objectives.
- Vinluan asked the nurses to bring a claim against Avalon Gardens and Sentosa for discrimination and they agreed to bring the claim;
- Vinluan, on the nurses’ behalf, filed a claim of discrimination with the Civil Rights Division of the Department of Justice against Avalon Gardens and Sentosa; and
- The ten nurses submitted their resignation letters to Avalon Gardens.
These were not, by any stretch of the imagination, criminal acts.7
Moreover, while the charges were premised on the claim of patient
The indictment‘s charge of patient abandonment was specious. The indictment did not allege that the nurses walked out during a shift or that any patients were actually harmed, or threatened with harm, by the nurses’ resignations, nor could it have. As the Second Department explained:
The nurses did not abandon their posts in the middle of their shifts. Rather, they resigned after the completion of their shifts, when the pediatric patients at Avalon Gardens were under the care of other nurses and staff members. Moreover, . . . coverage [for the patients] was indeed obtained, and no facts suggesting an imminent threat to the well being of the children have been alleged. Indeed, the fact that no children were deprived of nursing care played a large role in [DOE]‘s decision to clear the nurses of professional misconduct.
The indictment of Vinluan is particularly оutrageous. Surely a prosecutor has no colorable authority to bring charges against a lawyer for giving legal advice to clients and for filing a claim of discrimination on their behalf. As the Second Department held, “[a]s charged in the indictment, it is clear that Vinluan‘s criminal liability is predicated upon the exercise of ordinarily protected First Amendment rights.” Id. at 82. The court observed unequivocally that the prosecution of Vinluan was “an assault on the adversarial system of justice upon which our society, governed by the rule of law rather than individuals, depends.” Id. at 83; see also id. at 82 (“It cannot be doubted that an attorney has a constitutional right to provide legal advice to his clients within the bounds of the law.“) (collecting cases). I agree.
The majority observes that the Second Department‘s decision “complicates” the decision. Maj. Op. at 27. It does more than that; it dispels any doubt as to whether the prosecutors had colorable authority to criminally charge the nurses and their lawyer. As the Second Department concluded, the
New York law provides for a writ of prohibition “to prevent a body or officer acting in a judicial or quasi-judicial capacity from proceeding, or threatening to proceed, ‘without or in excess of jurisdiction.‘” Id. at 77 (quoting
Finally, I note that the issue of absolute immunity arose on defendants’ Rule 12(b)(6) motion. At a minimum, based on the circumstances described above and viewing all facts in the light most favorable to plaintiffs, plaintiffs plausibly alleged that the exception to absolute immunity applies here and they should have been allowed to proceed with their claims. As the majority acknowledges, the writ of prohibition is “rarely used.” Maj. Op. at 27. The fact that the Second Department took the extraordinary step of issuing the writ here is most telling.
The majority cites a number of cases barring claims against prosecutors based on absolute immunity, and, indeed, there are many of them. What sets this case apart, however, is the Second Department‘s decision holding that the prosecutors were “proceeding . . . ‘without or in excess of jurisdiction,‘” Vinluan, 873 N.Y.S.2d at 77 (quoting
III.
I turn to the question of qualified immunity.
Where a prosecutor acts in an investigative capacity, he enjoys only qualified -- as opposed to absolute -- immunity from suit. See Zahrey v. Coffey, 221 F.3d 342, 346 (2d Cir. 2000). “Qualified immunity protects a public оfficial from liability for conduct that ‘does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.‘” Id. at 347 (quoting Harlow v. Fitzgerald, 457 U.S. 800, 818 (1982)); see Horn v. Stephenson, 11 F.4th 163, 168-69 (2d Cir. 2021). Qualified immunity turns on “the objective legal reasonableness of the action,” Pearson v. Callahan, 555 U.S. 223, 244 (2009) (internal quotation marks omitted), and as the Supreme Court has repeatedly observed, “qualified immunity protects ‘all but the plainly incompetent or those
This Court recognizes a constitutional “right not to be deprived of liberty as a result of the fabrication of evidence by a government officer acting in an investigating capacity.” Zahrey, 221 F.3d at 344. We have explained that evidence may be fabricated not just through use of false statements, but also through “omissions that are both material and made knowingly.” Morse v. Fusto, 804 F.3d 538, 547 (2d Cir. 2015), cert. denied, 137 S. Ct. 126 (2016).
In Morse, we upheld a jury‘s award of more than $7 million in compensatory and punitive damages against a prosecutor and an investigator for denying a dentist his right to a fair trial in a Medicaid fraud prosecution. Id. at 541, 544. The jury found that the defendants had falsified billing summaries by omitting material information, they did so knowingly and as part of their investigation, and the “evidence was material to the grand jury‘s decision to indict.” Id. at 543, 548 (internal quotation marks omitted). While we recognized that prosecutors have no obligation to present exculpatory evidence to a grand jury, id. at 547, we nonetheless held that the defendants were not protected by qualified immunity:
[F]alse information likely to influence a jury‘s decision violates the accused‘s constitutional right to a fair trial, because to hold otherwise, works an unacceptable corruption of the truth-seeking function of the trial process. Information may be false if material omissions render an otherwise true statement false. For example, . . . we [have] affirmed a verdict against a police officer who was found to have misrepresented the evidence tо the prosecutors, or failed to provide the prosecutor with material evidence or information, or gave testimony to the Grand Jury that was false or contained material omissions, while knowing that he was making a material misrepresentation or omission by giving false testimony. . . . [T]he integrity of the judicial process can be unlawfully compromised by a government official‘s submission of information to a jury that implicates the accused based in part on material omissions.
Id. at 548 (cleaned up). We rejected the defendants’ attempt to distinguish between the obligations of prosecutors and those of police officers, as well as their attempt to distinguish between “affirmative misrepresentations and misleading omissions.” Id.9
For example, Lato did not tell the grand jury of DOE‘s “decision to clear the nurses of professional misconduct.” Vinluan, 873 N.Y.S.2d at 81-82. DOE concluded that “the nurses’ conduct did not constitute patient abandonment.” App‘x at 1280. Yet, Lato repeatedly referred to the nurses “who walked out without notice.” Id. at 380; see also id. at 378 (Lato: “On April 7 of [2006], all of the nurses who cared for the children in the pediatric area, without notice, they just came in and said we are out of here.“). In fact, eаch nurse gave between 8 to 72 hours’ notice. See Vinluan, 873 N.Y.S.2d at 76. Abandonment, of course, was the critical issue for the grand jury, and in his preliminary remarks to the grand jurors, Lato explained that “[t]he only focus to determine whether criminal charges have to be filed is nurses abandoning patients.” Id. at 377, 379-80. He specifically referred to DOE and its definition of “abandonment” -- without disclosing that DOE had found that there was no abandonment. Id. at 381-82. Lato did not merely omit this critical information, but he presented evidence that he knew was squarely contradicted by the omissions.
Likewise, Lato also withheld from the grand jury the Nassau County Supreme Court‘s ruling that Sentosa had failed to show a likelihood of success on the merits of its claims of patient abandonment. In fact, Lato called Sentosa‘s lawyer to elicit that she had sued the nurses and Vinluan on Sentosa‘s behalf. And yet he did not ask her about the state court‘s decision some seven months earlier denying Sentosa‘s motion for a preliminary injunction.
In his preliminary remarks, Lato explained that “the Education Law says that if a medical professional, doctor or nurse, walks out in the middle of a shift, that would be abandonment.” App‘x at 381. Whether the nurses walked out during a shift, while perhaps not dispositive, see id. at 381-82, was obviously an important factual question. At one point later in the grand jury proceedings, a grand juror asked Lato a question about a witness‘s testimony, specifically whether the nurses “walked out” during a shift:
GRAND JUROR: [The witness] used the term “walked out” several times which seems to indicate they walked out in thе middle of their shifts. I would like to know if they did in fact walk off the job during their shift.
Id. at 434. Lato refused to answer the question. Id. And although the witness, an investigator with the DA‘s Office, was recalled to answer certain questions, Lato chose not to ask him whether the investigator knew or had been told that the nurses had walked out during a shift. See id. at 426-32. In fact, as Lato knew (or
While supervisors and others with personal knowledge of what happened when the nurses resigned were called to testify in the grand jury, Lato withheld from the grand jurors evidence that the nurses did not walk out during a shift. To the contrary, he permitted one witness to testify that at a different facility (Brookhaven) the night before, “nine Filipino nurses” resigned at the same time, three of them during their shifts [JA 649], and that at Avalon Gardens “nine nurses did the same thing, that they handed [in] their resignation similar to the resignation[s] . . . in Brookhaven.” App‘x at 649-50. In fact, one of the nurses, Theresa Ramos, completed her shift at 7 p.m. and then stayed an extra four hours until 11 p.m. to ensure there was coverage -- and still she was indicted.
At his deposition in this case, Lato explained that he withheld the information about DOE‘s determination because it was hearsay, “misleading,” and “legally inadmissible.” Sealed App‘x at 432-33. Reports of a government
In contrast to his withholding of DOE‘s highly relevant determination, Lato permitted Francis Luyun, the CEO of Sentosa, to testify to rank hearsay: Luyun told the grand jurors that Vinluan was “trying to recruit his own nurses also to send here in the United States,” App‘x at 654, and that his knowledge was based on statements purportedly made to him by unidentified nurses. Moreover, plaintiffs presented evidence to show that Luyun‘s testimony was fabricated and that Lato knew it was false. Luyun testified in the grand jury that he knew Vinluan was trying to recruit nurses in the Philippines “[b]ecause it‘s in the newspaper ads he says he‘s promising them that he can give them a job with good benefits.” App‘x at 654. Yet, plaintiffs presented evidence to show that Lato knew, based on his investigation into Vinluan‘s business, that Vinluan
Taken together, all of these omissions unlawfully compromised the integrity of the judicial process by implicating the nurses and the lawyer based in part on material omissions. See Morse, 804 F.3d at 548.
The qualified immunity doctrine protects all but the “plainly incompetent.” Ziglar, 137 S. Ct. at 1867. This is one of the rare cases where the government officials indeed were “plainly incompetent.” In my view, a jury could very well find on this record that no reasonable prosecutor would have indicted the ten nurses and their lawyer in the circumstances here or omitted the material information discussed above.
Finally, the district court dismissed the claims against the County because it rejected the claims against Spota and Lato. As I would vacate the dismissal of the claims against Spota and Lato, I would also vacate the dismissal of the claims against the County.
* * * * *
The ten nurses and their lawyer were subjected to an outrageous criminal prosecution, and I cannot help but think that race and national origin were a factor. Sentosa employs many Filipino nurses, not just the ten plaintiffs, and, in pursuing these criminal charges, it clearly was sending a message to its Filipino nurses and others in the Philippines thinking of coming to the United States that they dare not challenge their work conditions.11 It is hard to imagine that the ten nurses would have been prosecuted for resigning their jobs if they had been White and American citizens. See Vinluan, 873 N.Y.S.2d at 81
Significantly, while we must assume for purposes of this appeal that the nurses were indeed treated in a discriminatory manner as they alleged below, see App‘x at 1169-70 (in letter to Avalon Gardens, nurses complained of discrepancies in pay and hours and asked to be “treated with fairness and respect“), Sentosa has in fact been found to have violated the rights of Filipino
GRAND JUROR: Does [Philipson] plan on going back to the Philippines and doing anymore recruiting?
LATO: Why would that --
GRAND JUROR: Because if he‘s using the District Attorney as a bargaining chip.
LATO: If he‘s using --
GRAND JUROR: I‘m just saying now, during contracts, if he‘s going to say, listen, if you fail to show up there could be criminal charges against you.
LATO: I can‘t ask him that question because it‘s not pertinent. I understand what you are saying. That‘s the type of thing that would pre-suppose there is some type of arrangement between the District Attorney‘s office and him. I‘ll have to have Tom Spota testify, which is not going to happen, you know. So.
App‘x at 483-84. Of course the question was pertinent.
The nurses and their lawyer should be permitted to pursue their claims for damages on the merits. I dissent.
