Sеeking money damages (but not reinstatement), Awilda Morales, appellee before us, sued several federal functionaries in the district court. 1 Her original salma-gundi of claims was gradually winnowed as *785 time went by and rulings intervened. We see no point in looking backward, but concentrate instead on what survives: Morales’ claim that defendants, in their individual capacities, violated her rights under the Due Process Clause by maliciously causing her to be prosecuted оn unfounded criminal charges.
After some earlier skirmishing not now relevant, the court below denied defendants’ request for summary judgment in respect to this cause of action, ruling that defendants were not shielded by qualified immunity.
Morales v. Ramirez,
Civ. No. 87-1416 (D.P.R. July 11, 1989). These interlocutory appeals followed.
See Mitchell v. Forsyth,
I
On a Mitchell-type intermediate appeal, customary summary judgment rules prevail.
See Amsden v. Moran,
Consonant with the foregoing, we limn the facts in the manner required by the liturgy of Rule 56 and thereafter proceed with our analysis of the legal issues involved.
II
For slightly over three years, plaintiff toiled as a secretary to Ronaldo Sanabria, director of the Caribbean Area Office of the United States Department of Labor (DOL). In November 1983, Morales received a promotion to beсome a wage-and-hours compliance officer. She began as a trainee under the direct supervision of defendant Sylvia O. Ramirez. Ramirez remained her immediate superior at all times material hereto.
In early 1985, based largely on the perceived similarity of different signatures, Ramirez began to voice suspicions that Morales had falsified documents and forged signatures. Ramirez saw to it that Morales’ impending promotion was sidetracked. Shе also consulted defendant Jorge Concepcion, a special agent of the federal Office of Inspector General (OIG). Concepcion started a preliminary investigation, first attempting to verify the authenticity of the questioned signatures. After discovering that one of the signatures was bogus, Concepcion advised Ramirez to inform the hierarchs at DOL.
Contrary to standard protocol and for reasons best known to herself, Ramirez chosе to leapfrog over Sanabria (her immediate superior and a person thought to be favorably disposed toward Morales). Instead, she contacted DOL’s assistant regional administrator, defendant Anthony J. Ponturiero. Ramirez gave Ponturiero certain materials to review, including plaintiff’s case diary sheets and three investigative files which she (Ramirez) had compiled. Ponturiero detected certain irregularities. He concluded that Morales had forged the signature of at least one employee on an interview statement and had submitted travel vouchers which did not correspond to the peregrinations reported in her case diary sheets. Ponturiero ascertained that, in an apparent coverup, some of Morales’ sheets had been edited to show that she had conducted interviews telephonically rather than in person (as originally asserted). He also discovered thаt someone had substituted new, unsigned statements for two of the “signed” statements which had come under scrutiny.
In July 1985, Ponturiero informed Ramirez about his findings and notified her *786 that he had turned the matter over to OIG for a more detailed probe. Concepcion resumed the paper chase. In October, he interviewed Morales, formally apprising her of the inquest and warning her of her rights in respect to possible criminal proceedings. When confronted with the claimed irrеgularities, Morales admitted discrepancies (including forging an employee’s signature on an interview record), but passed them off as inadvertent errors committed, for the most part, in reliance upon what she had learned from DOL colleagues. Concepcion’s analysis of the travel documents told him a different tale, revealing to his satisfaction that Morales, inter alia, had sought reimbursement for trips never taken. And when Concepcion broached the discrepancy between unsigned and signed statements in Morales’ work files, she asserted her Fifth Amendment right to remain silent.
OIG gave Concepcion’s final report (dated January 9, 1986) to the United States Attorney for the District of Puerto Rico to determine whether criminal prosecution was warranted. In providing a list of witnesses to the prosecutor, Concepcion omitted Sanabria’s name. The omission was hurtful to plaintiff inasmuch as Sanabria’s testimony would have been strоngly supportive of her. Without talking to Sanab-ria, the United States Attorney chose to present the case to a grand jury. A nine-count indictment was handed up, charging Morales with falsification of federal documents and making materially untrue statements for financial gain in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 287, 1001, 1341, 2071(b).
In May 1986, plaintiff resigned. In October 1986, the criminal case was tried. After both sides rested, the district court, relying heavily on Sanabria’s testimony, granted Morales’ motion for judgment of acquittal under Fed.R.Crim.P. 29. This civil action ensued.
Ill
Plaintiff’s one remaining cause of action is, in her words, “a constitutional tort claim for egregious malicious prosecution.” Ap-pellee’s Brief at 3. As such, it is brought under the imprimatur of
Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents of Federal Bureau of Narcotics,
We digress to note, and thereafter to skirt, a singular complication affecting
Bivens
actions in the federal workplace. Many federal workers, like plaintiff, come within the ambit of the Civil Service Reform Act of 1978 (CSRA), Pub.L. No. 95-454, 92 Stat. 1111 (1978) (codified in various sections of 5 U.S.C.). It is not precisely settled whether CSRA — which comprises an “integrated scheme of administrative and judicial review,”
United States v. Fausto,
That intricate legal riddles spark judicial interest is not enough to justify a court in volunteering solutions. Because the CSRA issue is not squarely before us,
see, e.g., Domegan v. Fair,
IV
Qualified immunity operates to shield government officials exercising discretionary powers “from liability for civil damages insofar as their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.”
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
Because qualified immunity does not address the substantive viability of [the asserted] claim, but rather the objective reasonableness of a defendant’s actions, a plaintiff who is entitled to prevail on the merits is not necessarily entitled to prevail on the issue of qualified immunity.
Collins v. Marina-Martinez,
We see no point in tiptoeing too timidly through the qualified immunity thicket. We have recognized before that, in certain cases, some aspect of the merits may be “inexorably intertwined” with the issue of qualified immunity.
Unwin,
In a ease like this one, the complainant is obliged to show “that the [defendants’] malicious conduct was so egregious that it violated substantive or procedural due process rights_”
Torres,
There is a categorical difference between tort claims for malicious prosecution and constitutional claims arising on the same terrain. Malicious prosecution does not
per se
abridge rights secured by the Constitution.
Torres,
At this juncture, we summarize the accusations which plaintiff has levelled against each defendant as to his or her role in the institution of the unsuccessful criminal proceedings. We keep in mind plaintiff’s blanket allegation that Ramirez was motivated by longstanding personal animosity toward her and that Concepcion, at least, shared that hostility to some degree. We also bear in mind plaintiff’s documented assertion that other cоmpliance officers who had experienced trouble with diary sheets and travel vouchers were dealt with intradepartmentally, not criminally.
1. Ramirez. Plaintiff argues that Ramirez never trained her in how to prepare travel vouchers and interview forms; assigned her too many cases; approved incorrect travel vouchers without instructing Morales to revise them; took the problem directly to Ponturiero, circumventing San-abria; pressed to resolve matters criminal *789 ly rather than administratively; and disregarded plaintiffs side of the story altogether.
2. Ponturiero. Plaintiff states the totality of her claim against this defendant as follows: “Ponturiero was the assistant area director [sic] and, instead of evaluating the matter objectively, he ... bypassed Sanabria and communicated and acted together with Ramirez and referred the matter for a criminal investigation.” Appel-lee’s Brief at 6.
3. Concepcion. Plaintiff says that the OIG agent conducted a “biased and improper investigation,” purposely neglected to identify Sanabria as a potential witness, “distorted the facts,” “omitted vital information,” and converted the investigation into a criminal one for no good reason. Id. at 7.
4. Del Rio. The fourth defendant, Socorro Del Rio, is mentioned only once in plaintiff’s brief on appeal, which recounts that Del Rio joined Concepcion and Ramirez “in conducting a search through all the files of the matters that had been handled by plaintiff Morales.” Id. While Del Rio was the woman who replaced plaintiff and received the promotion which she was denied, we can ascertain no real basis for her inclusion in what plaintiff visualizes as a cabal. 5
We think this evidentiary summary brings into sharp relief the weakness in plaintiff’s constitutional case. Del Rio was involved only in a routine records search. Ponturiero (who had every reason to suspect that something was amiss) merely dirеcted that an investigation take place. He then sent the investigative file to the United States Attorney. The accusations against Concepcion are mainly pejorative in nature. The exceptions, such as his failure to include Sanabria on the witness list, hardly rank as outrageous. Ramirez’s course of conduct, while more sustained, does not differ materially in kind and degree from that attributed to her codefend-ants.
In our judgment, this evidence is not “significantly probative,”
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477
U.S. 242, 249-50, 106 5.Ct. 2505, 2510-11,
Overall, plaintiff has not demonstrated that knowingly false or fraudulent information was presented to the prosecutor.
6
*790
Cf., e.g., White v. Frank,
To be sure, it was unusual for the defendants to have foregone an administrative solution. That others were not prosecuted for similar irregularities might perhaps indicate hostility, but we believe a referral to the United States Attorney, without considerably more, is as a matter of law inadequate to sustain a claim of constitutional breach. The further allegation that defendants “conspired” is sheer persiflage, adding nothing to the equation.
See Johnson,
V
We need go no further. If defendants’ behavior was as plaintiff claims, it was reproachable — but not within the narrow margins of plaintiff’s federally assured right to be free from malicious prosecution. Abusive though they may have been, the acts and omissions complained of were neither conscience-shocking nor so egregious as to violate due process. Were defendants’ conduct presented as a matter to be resolved on the merits, plaintiff’s burden would be to make out “a deprivation of constitutional magnitude.”
Torres,
Reversed.
Notes
. The four federal defendants, and the positions held by them, are identified and described infra. The defendants’ conjugal partnerships were also sued. By the same token, Morales' husband, Eric Vega Ramos, joined Morales as a nаmed plaintiff. Because the presence of spousal parties is immaterial to the issues before us, we treat Morales as if she were the sole plaintiff and likewise ignore the references to defendants’ conjugal partnerships.
. In appropriate qualified immunity cases, some circuits have exercised a species of pendent appellate jurisdiction over matters beyond those bound up in the qualified immunity inquiry.
See Hill v. Department of the Air Force,
The Unwin approach stops somewhat short of endorsing a "pendent appellate jurisdiction” approach. We do not propose to address today the contours of the latter doctrine. It is perfectly obvious that if pendent appellate jurisdiction is available at all — a matter on which we intimate no view — the doctrine’s use is discretionary. We see nothing in this case which would dispose us to employ such discretion and reach out, gratuitously, for the CSRA issue. We do, however, exercise the narrower prerogative reserved by Unwin and review directly the issue underlying, and interwoven with, appеllants' qualified immunity defense. See infra.
. We note in passing that, in the mid-1980s, there was some doubt as to the availability of a constitutional remedy for malicious prosecution.
See, e.g., Landrigan v. City of Warwick,
. In her brief, plaintiff collects and summarizes her grievances as follows:
The criminal action was initiated and instigated by defendants; the criminal action terminated in favor of plaintiff Morales; defendants’ malice is evident; defendants acted jointly to deprive plaintiff Morales of her liberty, purposely ignoring exculpatory sources of evidence, distorting and falsifying facts and distorting and corrupting the administrative process with the bad faith intention of having her indicted; defendants acted without probable cause....
Appellee’s Brief at 12-13. This characterization tends more toward the substantive, especially since plaintiff has not argued, either below or on appeal, that her rights were jeopardized by the scantiness оf available post-deprivation remediation.
Cf. Torres,
. In earlier (unverified) pleadings, plaintiff ruminated that she had been told by some unidentified person that Del Rio provided damaging information to Ramirez and believed that Del Rio resented Morales’ initial selectiоn for the promotion. Hearsay and speculation of this ilk are, of course, impuissant in the face of a properly documented Rule 56 motion.
See Garside,
.
To be sure, Morales alleges in conclusory fashion that defendants were "falsifying facts.”
See
*790
supra
note 4. But she identifies no particular fabrication. It is a settled principle of Rule 56 jurisprudence that, where a nonmovant bears the burden of proof, she can defeat summary judgment only if she can "reliably demonstrate that
specific facts
sufficient to create an authentic dispute exist.”
Garside,
