Taj Becker is a medical doctor in St. George, Utah, who participated in Utah’s Medicaid program. Between 1998 and 2001, she was investigated by Utah’s Medicaid Fraud Control Unit (MFCU) for alleged billing irregularities. The investigation culminated with the filing of a civil complaint and criminal charges. Those charges were later dismissed by state prosecutors concerned about the methods MFCU used to obtain records and assess Becker’s billing practices.
After the charges were dismissed, Becker brought claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging that the MFCU investigation was a sham to force her to pay civil penalties to avoid criminal prosecution. Her lawsuit was based on several federal and state theories, which she has distilled on appeal to the following: (1) malicious prosecution under the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments; (2) outrageous conduct in violation of substantive due process under the Fourteenth Amendment; (3) retaliation under the First Amendment; and (4) libel under state law.
For the reasons discussed herein, we AFFIRM the district court’s grant of summary judgment to the defendants as to the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment claims, and we REVERSE and REMAND the First Amendment retaliation and state law libel claims.
I. Factual Background
Becker is a board-certified neurologist practicing in St. George, Utah. Her claims arise out of a criminal investigation and prosecution by MFCU, a task force assignеd to combating Medicaid fraud in Utah. The MFCU investigation centered on a suspicion that Becker “up-coded” or over-billed the government for services performed for Medicaid patients in her care. 1 The facts of this case are best understood chronologically.
MFCU Begins an Investigation and Subpoenas Becker’s Records
In early to mid-November 1998, Becker’s billings to Medicaid were flagged by MFCU research analyst Terry Allen. Allen concluded that Becker’s bills showed evidence of possible up-coding. Allen’s work was the basis for an initial investigation by Sergeant Jeff Wright, the chief investigator for MFCU. Wright’s investigation allegedly supported Allen’s conclusion that Becker may have up-coded. As a result, J. Denis Kroll, the Assistant Utah Attorney General who served as MFCU’s lead prosecutor, sought and received permission from a state judge to issue subpoenas for Becker’s medical records.
On the morning of November 17, 1998, Wright and MFCU medical investigator Michelle HeberNSnow arrived unannounced at Becker’s office and demanded that she produce certain medical records for copying. The subpoena requested billing records for forty-seven randomly-selected patients between 1995 and 1998. Wright informed Becker that since she had signed a provider agreement with Medicaid, he was entitled to the records. Becker informed Wright that she would only produce the records pursuant to a subpoena. Wright then provided Becker with what appeared to be a facially valid subpoena for the records. The subpoena provided that Becker could refuse to turn over the records immediately and appear a *910 few days later in Salt Lake City if she wanted to contest the subpoena. 2 After reviewing the subpoena, Becker chose not to challenge it and instructed her staff to produce the records immediately. Wright and others from MFCU removed and copied dozens of patient records, which they returned to Becker’s office later that day. Hebert-Snow performed an initial review of the copied records and concluded that Becker had likely up-coded.
MFCU Threatens Prosecution and Proposes Settlement of the Charges
Becker was then asked to come to Salt Lake City to meet with Kroll to discuss the investigation. On January 20, 1999, Becker traveled to Salt Lake City and met with Kroll, Wright, and Hebert-Snow. According to Becker, this meeting was first an interview and then an impromptu settlement conference. Specifically, Becker claims she was told that if she did not pay $107,000 to MFCU within two weeks, she would face criminal prosecution. In his own words, Kroll testified that he informed Becker of the “parade of horrors” and “how bad it could get” if MFCU filed criminal charges. Supp.App. Aple. Kroll, et al. 294-97.
Bеcker maintained she was innocent of any up-coding and refused to settle with MFCU. Becker argued to Kroll that the medical experts who had reviewed her billing practices were not neurologists and therefore had no expertise to determine the validity of her billing statements. Following this exchange, and without telling Becker, MFCU contracted with Dr. Vine, an independent neurologist, to review Becker’s records. Vine concluded that Becker’s billing practices were appropriate.
In April 1999, Kroll again contacted Becker and offered to waive any criminal prosecution if Becker would pay $49,605 to MFCU. Kroll provided Becker with a draft criminal complaint against her seeking $646,000 in damages. Becker again maintained her innocence and refused to settle.
MFCU Files and Withdraws Civil Suit
On June 24, 1999, Kroll filed a civil suit against Becker, asking for $25,000 in damages plus fines and investigative costs. According to Kroll, he filed the suit as part of settlement discussions with Becker, and he dismissed the civil action less than two weeks later on July 7, 1999 when settlement failed to materialize.
Following the dismissal of the civil action, Becker began to publicly respond to the MFCU investigation. First, in November 1999, .she filed a Notice of Claim against MFCU. 3 She and her husband also initiated a letter-writing campaign in which they contacted the Governor, federal and state legislators, and other officials, detailing what Becker believed were unprofessional investigative practices and bullying tactics of MFCU. Only one letter in the record, sent to the Chairman of the Utah Senate Appropriations Committee, and copied to the Chairman of the Utah House Appropriations Committee and the Utah Governor, is dated prior to the filing of criminal charges against Becker.
The state decided in 1999 to transfer oversight of MFCU from the Utah Department of Public Safety to the Attorney General’s Office, a transfer the district court attributed to political pressure from rural doctors claiming maltreatment by MFCU. In December 1999, David Gardner took over Kroll’s position as the lead prosecutor *911 for MFCU. Kroll became interim director of MFCU. 4
MFCU Files a Criminal Complaint
On January 11, 2000, MFCU filed felony charges in state court concerning Becker’s billing practices. That same day, Becker’s husband testified before a state legislative committee about MFCU’s alleged prosecu-torial abuses. According to Gardner, he made the decision to file criminal charges based in part on an information and affidavit signed by Wright, one of the original MFCU investigators on the case. Gardner also discussed the case with several other prosecutors, including his supervisors, before he decided to file charges against Becker. Shortly after the criminal charges were filed, Wright was transferred out of MFCU to a different department although he later testified at Becker’s preliminary hearing.
At the preliminary hearing on July 11, 2000, the prosecution presented evidence in support of the charges. Prior to the defense presenting any evidence, the court stated, “I believe the State has provided sufficient evidence on each of those elements and, accordingly, I bind you over.” Supp.App. Aple. Kroll, et al. 580. After making this statement, the coxxrt then acknowledged that the court “probably acted prematurely in doing this bind over” because Becker was not given an opportunity to testify. Id. Becker, through her attorney, then chose not to present any evidence at the preliminary hearing given the court’s earlier statement. 5
MFCU Withdraws Criminal Complaint Due to Irregularities in Investigation
Shortly after the preliminary hearing, Gardner became aware of several irregularities in the investigation. In particular, Gardner learned that Becker’s medical records were not obtained voluntarily as Wright had originally led him to believe. Gardner also discovered that there never had been a return of service filed with the court with respect to the subpoenas, as required under Utah law, and that key meetings between Becker and MFCU members had not beеn documented, including the January and April 1999 settlement offers. Gardner further discovered that MFCU had consulted with Dr. Vine, and that Dr. Vine had found no irregularities in Becker’s billing and Medicaid coding practices. Dr. Vine’s review and conclusions regarding Becker’s billing records were not documented in the MFCU case file and were never provided to Becker as potential exculpatory evidence. Because of these irregularities, Gardner concluded that the key evidence would likely be suppressed prior to trial and dismissed the *912 criminal case with prejudice on September 6, 2000.
Becker Cleared at Administrative Hearing but Judged on World Wide Web
Gardner instead referred the case to the Utah Division of Health Care Financing for administrative action. An agency action was brought against Becker to recover $5,000 allegedly collected by means of fraudulent up-coding. After a hearing on the merits, Becker was found to owe nothing.
On January 12, 2001, MFCU nevertheless published an account of Becker’s case on its website as a part of its statutorily-required annual report. The report was worded in a way to make it appear as though Becker was guilty of up-coding despite the dismissal of the criminal ease and the later administrative determination in favor of Becker. The relevant section of the report was drafted by Gardner at the request of Gale Evans, who became MFCU director in August 2000. MFCU removed the report from its website on May 19, 2001, after complaints from Becker of its libelous nature.
Becker’s Allegations Regarding Defendants’ Motivation
Becker claimed in district court that MFCU engaged in a scheme to charge innocent physicians in rural areas with Medicaid fraud to increase fraud recoveries for MFCU. Becker asserts that the investigation of her and other rural doctors began only after department supervisors placed pressure on MFCU to improve its financial recoveries. MFCU is required to submit quarterly statistical reports to the federal Office of the Inspector General — State Medicaid Oversight and Policy, which bases financial grants in part on fraud recovery performance and can de-certify Medicaid fraud units on the basis of poor recoveries. Becker claims this dynamic put financial pressure on MFCU to justify its existence and caused members of MFCU to prosecute innocent persons, particularly rural doctors who were more likely to pay the requested fines than incur the high costs associated with fighting a legal battle with MFCU.
II. Procedural History
Becker initially filed suit in January 2002 in the United States District Court for the District of Utah under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and state law. Her third and final amended complaint, filed in January 2004 alleged nine causes of action: (1) denial of due process; (2) extortion/bribеry; (3) retaliation for speaking out on a matter of public concern; (4) libel; (5) malicious prosecution; (6) declaratory judgment; (7) injunction; (8) conspiracy; and (9) substantive due process. The district court issued two rulings on summary judgment. First, in October 2004 it granted summary judgment in favor of all defendants on all claims except the malicious prosecution and related conspiracy claims against Kroll and Wright.
Becker v. Kroll,
In March 2005, the district court then granted Kroll and Wright’s Renewed Motion for Summary Judgment as to the remaining claims on the ground that a malicious prosecution claim cannot proceed when the plaintiff was never “seized” under the Fourth Amendment. Without evidence of seizure, the § 1983 claims and the related conspiracy claims were dismissed. Becker timely appealed both summary judgment orders.
III. Analysis
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo using the same standard as the district court.
Croy v. COBE Labs., Inc.,
Becker contends that the district court erred in granting summary judgment on her federal constitutional and state libel clаims. 6 In particular, she claims that the defendants violated her constitutional rights in three ways: (1) malicious prosecution under the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment; (2) outrageous conduct under the Fourteenth Amendment’s substantive due process component; and (3) retaliation under the First Amendment. Her libel claim rests on whether the district court correctly applied Utah law.
We note that what Becker addresses in her brief as separate claims — malicious prosecution, violation of procedural due process, and violation of substantive due process — all amount to the claim that she was investigated and prosecuted without probable cause. We therefore address all of her claims under the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments as malicious prosecution claims. We then address her claims for First Amendment retaliation and libel.
A. Malicious Prosecution Claims Under the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments
This case requires us to wade into the murky waters of § 1983-based malicious prosecution claims. Section 1983 provides a federal civil cause of action against state officials for the “deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution.” 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Claims under § 1983 are often analytically similar to — although still distinct from — common law torts, such as malicious prosecution. Most recently, in
Pierce v. Gilchrist,
The core inquiry under any § 1983 action, regardless of the analogous common law tort, is whether the plaintiff has alleged an actionable constitutional violation.
Id.
at 1290 (citing
Taylor v. Meacham,
Becker argues the district court erred in two respects in considering her claims: she argues (1) that criminal charges alone, even though subsequently dismissed, constitute a sufficient restraint on her liberty to qualify as a seizure under the Fourth Amendment, and (2) that MFCU also violated her due process rights during the course of the investigation, which provides an additional constitutional basis for her malicious prosecution cause of action.
We have repeatedly recognized in this circuit that, at least prior to trial, the relevant constitutional underpinning for a claim of malicious prosecution under § 1983 must be “the Fourth Amendment’s right to be free from unreasonable seizures.”
Taylor,
1. Was There a Fourth Amendment Seizure?
The Fourth Amendment protects the right of citizens to “be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures.” U.S. Const, amend. IV. Becker advances two arguments under which MFCU violated her Fourth Amendment rights. First, she argues that MFCU unreasonably seized her person because the investigation into her billing practices imposed burdens on her time, finances, and reputation by requiring her to travel to and attend meetings, pay legal costs, and, eventually, face criminal charges. Second, she argues that MFCU unreasonably seized her property when it copied her medical records.
a. Seizure of Person
“Violation of the Fourth Amendment requires an intentional acquisition of physical control.”
Brower v. County of Inyo,
Becker nonetheless argues that we should adopt a broader theory of seizure, based on the Supreme Court’s decision in
Albright v. Oliver,
Justice Ginsburg’s continuing seizure analysis has yet to garner a majority of the justices of the Supreme Court, and we are not compelled to adopt it. The Court has been careful to tie all actions under § 1983 to specifically protected constitutional rights in order to avoid creating a free-standing constitutional tort regime under § 1983. To extend liability in cases without a traditional seizure would expand the notion of seizure beyond recognition and fall into the trap carefully avoided by the
Albright
majority — every charging decision would support a § 1983 malicious prosecution-type claim no matter the context.
See Nieves v. McSweeney,
We thus agree with the courts that have also declined to accept Justice Ginsburg’s invitation to expand Fourth Amendment liability in cases where the plaintiff has not been arrested or incarcerated.
See DiBella v. Borough of Beachwood,
Even those courts that subscribe to the line of reasoning endorsed by Justice Ginsburg have recognized a seizure only when criminal charges are coupled with another significant restraint on liberty, such as restrictions on travel.
See Evans v. Ball,
Accordingly, the district court did not err in determining Becker was not seized under the Fourth Amendment.
b. Seizure of Property
Nor did the defendants unreasonably seize Becker’s property in violation of the Fourth Amendment. Becker makes two arguments that the subpoena of her records provides the Fourth Amendment violation necessary to her claim for malicious prosecution under § 1983:(1) the copying of her medical records was an unreasonable seizure because it occurred by means of a subpoena that was not supported by probable cause, and (2) MFCU’s various violations of state law collectively add up to a Fourth Amendment violation.
Probable Cause for the Subpoena
First, MFCU’s issuance of a subpoena to inspect Becker’s medical records was not unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment because state administrative subpoenas need not be supported by probable cause. Under Fourth Amendment law, an investigatory or administrative subpoena is not subject to the same probable cause requirements as a search warrant.
See v. City of Seattle,
That the subpoena was issued administratively with potential criminal ramifications does not change the analysis. In
United States v. Smith,
The subpoena here met these minimal requirements for Fourth Amendment reasonableness, and Becker does not argue otherwise. Becker’s Medicaid filings were flagged by MFCU’s analyst, and the records sought were relevant to MFCU’s investigation of potential up-coding. Becker does not argue that the request wаs unreasonably burdensome or overbroad, and MFCU was able to copy and return the files in a day. We see no reason to conclude the subpoena was unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment, so the subpoena alone does not provide the basis for a § 1983 claim.
State Law Violations
Second, Becker also argues that, even if probable cause was not a necessary predicate to a valid subpoena under the Fourth Amendment, MFCU violated a number of state law provisions in issuing the subpoena for her medical records which collectively amount to an unreasonable Fourth Amendment seizure. For example, she argues that the subpoena suffered from problems including (1) service by an interested party, (2) failure of MFCU to file a statutorily required return of service with the issuing court, and (3) failure to notify Becker that the records in the court file were sealed.
A state’s violation of its own law, however, is not sufficient, in and of itself, to create a federal constitutional violation.
Davis v. Scherer,
Because Becker has not successfully alleged a violation of the Fourth Amendment, she cannot proceed in a claim for malicious prosecution based on an unreasonable seizure.
2. Is There a Malicious Prosecution Claim Based on a Fourteenth Amendment Due Process Violation?
Even without a Fourth Amendment seizure, Becker argues that MFCU’s conduct violated her due process rights because the probe into her billing practices deprived her of liberty or property “without due process of law.” She alleges that MFCU’s actions violated both the proce
*918
dural and substantive components of due process.
8
We note at the outset that a natural reading of Supreme Court precedent in
Albright v. Oliver
seems to foreclose Becker’s argument that MFCU violated her due process rights by initiating criminal proceedings against her without probable cause.
Nevertheless, reading Becker’s filings liberally, she alleges some injuries resulting from the filing of criminal charges against her that are outside the scope of the Fourth Amendment’s substantive and procedural protections. These injuries might be cognizable as due process violations through a gap in constitutional protection created by Albright’s limitation of § 1983 malicious prosecution claims to those based on the Fourth Amendment. We therefore go оn to examine Becker’s potential due process claims. Even if Al-bright does not foreclose these claims, Becker has not stated a violation of her due process rights.
a. Effect of Albright on Due Process Malicious Prosecution Claims
In
Albright,
the Court specifically rejected the plaintiff’s claim that his groundless arrest violated substantive due process rights by depriving him of a “ ‘liberty interest’ to be free from criminal prosecution except upon probable cause.”
We think the unavoidable construction of
Albright
is that no § 1983 claim will arise from filing criminal charges without probable cause under the substantive due process protections of the Fourteenth Amendment. And although
*919
the plaintiff in
Albright
did not raise a
procedural
due process claim,
Our
post-Albright
cases similarly emphasize the prominence of the Fourth Amendment in the analysis of pre-trial liberty interests.
See Pierce,
Under the facts of this case, where criminal charges were brought but dismissed before trial, Becker must allege a violation of the Fourth Amendment in order to proceed on a theory of § 1983 malicious prosecution. The Supreme Court nonetheless has yet to clarify the scope of the plurality holding in Albright. And several lines of cases suggest an alternative theory of liability under the Fourteenth Amendment. We turn to those theories next.
b. Procedural Due Process
Becker alleges seven separate instances which she claims collectively amount to a violation of her procedural due process rights. 10 For analytical clarity, we construe her due process claims to be based on the following two potentially protected interests: (1) a liberty interest in being free from unwarranted investigation and prosecution without probable cause, and-(2) a property interest in the integrity of her medical and billing records.
We conclude that Becker’s procedural due process interests under these facts were adequately protected by the Fourth Amendment, state tort law, and the procedures offered to challenge the administrative subpoena.
The Investigation and Prosecution
Becker first argues she had a protected liberty interest in freedom from the baseless investigation into her billing practices and the subsequent filing of criminal charges, when they were not supported by *920 probable cause. We do not agree she has established an absence of procedural protections sufficient to create a due process violation.
Several cases suggest that at , some point in the prosecutorial process, due process concerns cаn be sufficient to support a claim under § 1983.
See, e.g., Pierce,
But even if we assume a procedural due process analysis applies to Becker’s case, she has not established a due process violation. First, under
Albright
and our subsequent cases, the Fourth Amendment adequately protected Becker’s constitutional liberty interests, and she therefore has no procedural due process claim based on pre-trial deprivations of physical liberty.
See Albright,
Nevertheless, we acknowledge that the Fourteenth Amendment’s protections encompass harms to liberty outside the scope of the Fourth Amendment’s concern with freedom from restraint, such as harm to reputation resulting in some tangible injury, from which a plaintiff in Becker’s circumstances may indeed suffer.
See, e.g., Michael H. v. Gerald D.,
In this case, state tort remedies meet the procedural requirements of the Due Process Clause. The Supreme Court has held that where pre-deprivation remedies cannot anticipate and prevent a state actor’s wrongful act, post-deprivation state tort remedies are adequate to satisfy due process requirements.
Parratt v. Taylor,
Becker does not suggest what pre-depri-vation process could have anticipated the malfeasance of the MFCU investigators and protected her from an abusive investigation, and we decline to supply procedural requirements in addition to already-established criminal procedure under the Constitution and state law. Utah tort law provides an adequate post deprivation remedy to protect Becker’s non-Fоurth Amendment liberty interests.
See Gilbert v. Ince,
Becker has therefore suffered no deprivation of liberty in violation of her procedural due process rights.
The Medical Records
Nor does the subpoena of her medical records create a separate cause of action under Fourteenth Amendment procedural due process. First, Becker’s participation in the state and federal Medicaid program established a continuing obligation to make records available to state officials. MFCU was entitled to the records, which it copied and returned the same day. Accordingly, any property interest Becker had in the records was minimal.
Second, “[u]nder the Fourteenth Amendment, procedural due process requires notice and a pre-deprivation hearing before property interests are negatively affected by governmental actors.”
Mar
*922
cus v. McCollum,
Admittedly, the opportunity for a hearing offered was inconvenient, requiring a 300-mile trip to Salt Lake City. Nevertheless, that Becker chose to comply with the subpoena rather than avail herself of the process provided does not amount to a violation of any procedural due process rights.
The district court did not err in dismissing Becker’s procedural due process claims.
c. Substantive Due Process
Justice Souter’s concurrence in
Albright
suggested the possibility that initiating an unwarranted prosecution that is dismissed before trial may in some unusual circumstances result in substantive due process violations separate from a Fourth Amendment seizure: “There may indeed be exceptional cases where some quantum of harm occurs in the interim period after groundless criminal charges are filed but before any Fourth Amendment seizure. Whether any such unusual case may reveal a substantial deprivation of liberty ... independent of the Fourth Amendment, are issues to be faced only when they arise.”
Albright,
Becker argues that MFCU officials violated her substantive rights under the Fourteenth Amendment’s due process clause when they engaged in a groundless investigation designed to obtain civil penalties from her and withheld material evidence tending to exonerate her. We conclude this is not a case that reveals a substantial deprivation sufficient to rise to the level of a substantive due process violation.
Claims Arising From the Investigation
Our cases recognize a § 1983 claim for a violation of Fourteenth Amendment substantive due process rights in the narrowest of circumstances. The conduct alleged “must do more than show that the
*923
government actor intentionally or recklessly caused injury to the plaintiff by abusing or misusing government power ... [It] must demonstrate a degree of outrageousness and a magnitude of potential or actual harm that is truly conscience shocking.”
Livsey v. Salt Lake County,
The Supreme Court sets a similarly high hurdle for substantive due process claims. It “has always been reluctant to expand the concept of substantive due process because the guideposts for responsible deci-sionmaking in this unchartered area are scarce and open-ended.”
Collins v. Harker Heights,
The conduct alleged here does not meet this rigorous standard. While the enforcement tactics and absence of professionalism in this case — if true as alleged — fail the most obvious standards of proper conduct, they do not meet the affronts to personal autonomy suggested by our case law. Becker has a number of well-defined causes of action under state and federal law to vindicate her interests. To rest her claims on the undefined contours of substantive due process would only introduce uncertainty and analytical confusion to an already unwieldy body of law. 12
Claims Arising From the Withholding of Evidence
Becker also claims MFCU violated her due process rights by withholding exculpatory evidence. Several other circuits have recognized a § 1983 malicious prosecution-type claim under similar circumstances.
See Moran v. Clarke,
*924
Beckеr presents a similar claim: that the defendants violated her due process rights, as distinguished from her Fourth Amendment rights, by suppressing exculpatory evidence and denying her a fair hearing. And this claim has constitutional weight: the Supreme Court in
Brady v. Maryland,
Other courts allowing this type of claim despite
Albright
have specifically rooted the constitutional violation in the due process right to a fair trial.
See Castellano,
Nevertheless, Becker never proceeded to trial, and she cannot therefore rest her § 1983 claims on a
Brady
violation.
See Brady,
Accordingly, we agree with the district court that Becker has not established a claim for a violation of substantive due process under the Fourteenth Amendment.
*925 In sum, the district court did not err in dismissing Becker’s malicious prosecution claims based on the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments. Because we determine that Becker’s Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment claims were properly dismissed by the district court, it follows that her claim of conspiracy by the various defendants to commit these constitutional violations also fails.
B. Retaliation Claim Under the First Amendment
Becker also asserts a § 1983 claim for retaliatory prosecution under the First Amendment. She contends that Gardner filed criminal charges against her as a result of her public denunciations of MFCU. She points to the fact that just hours after her husband testified before a state legislative committee regarding MFCU’s investigative practices, MFCU filed its criminal case. We agree with the district court that Gardner is absolutely immune from suit for the decision to file charges, but we remand for further consideration of Becker’s retaliation claim against other defendants.
A prosecutor’s charging decisions are absolutely immune from civil suit for monetary damages.
Hartman v. Moore,
The doctrine of absolute immunity, however, is not without limits. Prosecutors and other government officials are not entitled to immunity for administrative and investigative actions that may have influenced the decision to file criminal charges.
See Hartman,
To establish a § 1983 retaliation claim against non-immune officials, Becker must plead and prove (1) that she was engaged in a constitutionally protected activity; (2) that a defendant’s action caused her to suffer an injury that would chill a person of ordinary firmness from continuing to engage in that activity; and (3) that a defendant’s action was substantially motivated as a response to her exercise of her First Amendment speech rights.
Worrell v. Henry,
*926 We believe the record on appeal presents a possiblе inference of retaliatory action. To survive summary judgment on the retaliation claim, Becker must present a genuine issue of material fact as to whether a non-immune defendant influenced the decision to prosecute in retaliation for protected speech. Viewing the facts in the light most favorable to Becker, we can infer the following from the record: (1) in November and December of 1999, Becker began speaking out about MFCU by filing a Notice of Claim against the state and writing to state lawmakers; (2) Becker’s speech was part of a larger political debate around the same time that resulted in management changes at MFCU: in December 1999, Gardner became the MFCU lead prosecutor and sometime thereafter, the state legislature transferred oversight of MFCU from the Department of Public Safety to the Attorney General’s office; (3) some defendants stated at their depositions that they were aware of the public criticism and at some point were aware of Becker’s planned litigation against the state; (4) while Gardner was reviewing Becker’s case, he discussed the investigation with some defendants; (5) these defendants may have withheld information about the investigation from Gardner; (6) as a result, Gardner did not have complete information abоut the Becker investigation before he made the decision to file charges; and (7) if Gardner had complete information, he would not have filed criminal charges in January 2000.
If Becker has established a genuine issue of material fact as to the points above against defendants not entitled to immunity, her retaliation claim may be able to proceed to a jury.
See, e.g., Meyer v. Bd. of County Comm’rs of Harper County,
We therefore remand the retaliation claim to the district court for further consideration on summary judgment.
C. State Libel Claim
Finally, in a pendent state law claim Becker argues that Gardner and Evans committed libel by publishing untrue statements about her case on the MFCU website, which was available to the public. We conclude that Becker has established sufficient evidence for a jury to consider her libel claim.
In brief, the MFCU website detailed MFCU activities, including cases, dispositions, and general news. Becker’s case was reported under a category called “Fraud Cases-Dismissals,” on January 12, 2001, well after MFCU had dismissed all *927 of its charges against her. The MFCU report included the following passage:
Taj Becker, M.D. This neurologist was charged with one Second Degree Felony-count of False Claims for Medical Benefits. The case stemmed from Utah MFCU investigation which uncovered widespread [] upcoding. Patient records obtained from the doctor’s office failed to substantiate corresponding services had been provided to justify the upcoded bills submitted to Medicaid. Fraud estimate approximated $17,000. Following the Preliminary Hearing (PH) in this ease, the defendant was bound over for trial as charged, but significant problems were disclosed during the PH, including key meetings with the defendant which had not been documented, and referral of the case to a neurologist expert, also not documented. Because of political pressure which had been brought on the MFCU as a result of this case and several others involving rural doctors, the case was dismissed with prejudice, and referred to the Utah Department of Health for civil or administrative recovery of the overpaid Medicaid funds.
Aplt.App. 161 (emphasis added).
Becker alleges that this published statement about her case is libelous under Utah state law. To state a claim for defamation in Utah, a plaintiff must show “[1] that defendants published the statements concerning him [either in print or by spoken words], [2] that the statements were false, defamatory, and not subject to any privilege, [3] that the statements were published with the requisite degree of fault, and [4] that their publication resulted in damage.”
West v. Thomson Newspapers,
Under Utah law, the libel plaintiff must prove “malice” to establish the requisite degree of fault for the third element of
Thomson Newspapers.
The district court dismissed Becker’s libel claim because she “failed to produce evidence sufficient to support a finding of fraud or malice in the publication [by Gardner or Evans] of the report on the Internet.”
18
Becker v. Kroll,
Under the common law standard of malice, to overcome a conditional privilege [such as that provided by the Utah Governmental Immunity Act], a plaintiff must show ‘an improper motive such as a desire to do harm or that the defendant did not honestly believe his state *928 ments to be true or that the publication was excessive.’
Russell v. Thomson Newspapers,
The record supports an inference of malice under the Thomson Newspapers standard. At the time MFCU dropped its case against Becker in September 2000, Gardner had detеrmined that evidence of Becker’s innocence had possibly been withheld from him. By the time the case summary was published in January 2001, moreover, both civil and criminal claims had been dismissed for over five months. Gardner and Evans thus had concluded well before the publication on the website that the charges were unprosecutable, among other things, due to problems associated with the subpoena, missing notes of alleged meetings, and the failure to disclose material exculpatory evidence. And Becker later prevailed in an administrative hearing on the billing allegations.
Despite these facts, the Internet publication uses loaded jargon such as “political pressure” to imply that Becker was guilty as charged, and that dismissal was not based on the merits of the charges. To compound the implication, the publication tells the reader that Becker’s case had been referred to another state agency for collection of “overpaid Medicaid funds,” a clear statement that Becker had committed fraud against the state and was let off the hook for other reasons.
While Gardner argues he subjectively believed Becker was a law-breaker at the time of the report’s publication, a reasonable jury could conclude that both Gardner and Evans could not have reasonably believed the statements were true. The defendants will be able to provide evidence of their subjective belief at trial, but at the stage of summary judgment, enough evidence of malice exists to merit consideration by the jury.
Gardner and Evans also argue that their involvement in the case summary is immune under Utah law. Under Utah’s libel law, a report required by state or federal law is immune from suits for libel or slander if made “in the proper discharge of an official duty” or “by a fair and true report, without malice, of a judicial, legislative or other public official proceeding.” Utah Code Ann. § 45-2-3(1) and (4). Evans and Gardner claim the privilege from suit because the MFCU annual report is a publication required by the federal government as part of Utah’s participation in the Medicaid program. While the statute will provide an immunity from suit for “fair and true” reports, it expressly provides the same state-of-mind exception as the governmental immunity statute — malice.
In sum, the district court erred in dismissing Becker’s state law libel claim against Gardner and Evans for failure to present evidence of malice.
IV. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s dismissal of Becker’s Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and REVERSE the court’s dismissal of Becker’s First Amendment retaliation and related consрiracy claims. We also REVERSE the dismissal of the state law libel claim against defendants/appellees Gardner and Evans. We therefore REMAND the retaliation and conspiracy claims and the state law claim to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this *929 opinion. 19
Notes
. Up-coding is over-billing of a particular kind: it is the practice of billing the government for a more expensive medical service than the service actually provided the Medicaid patient. Because Medicaid has a special billing code for thousands of individual medical procedures, the term "up-coding” is used to indicate the use of a higher code in the billing than is justified by the procedure performed.
. It is worth noting that Salt Lake City is approximately 300 miles northeast of St. George.
. A Notice of Claim is required under Utah law where any citizen seeks recovery from an arm of the state government.
. The parties seem to disagree about when the transfer to the Attorney General’s Office occurred. Defendants’ brief suggests the transfer took place in July 1999. Aples. Kroll et al. Br. 20. Becker’s brief does not provide a date for the transfer, but Gardner stated in his deposition that control of MFCU was transferred to the Utah Attorney General’s Office after he began working there in December 1999. Aplt.App. 224. To the extent this establishеs a factual issue, we view it in the light most favorable to Becker. We therefore assume the transfer took place in December 1999 after Becker began speaking publicly about MFCU’s tactics.
. Becker disputes that she was ever actually bound over for trial under state law because the judge did not sign the required minute entry. For unknown reasons, a minute entry was stamped with the state judge’s signature by the clerk of court several months after the minute entry was originally entered. The court clerk who stamped the minute entry with the judge’s signature cannot recall whether she stamped the minute entry at the request of someone else or on her own volition. Nevertheless, the court clerk's testimony is clear that she did not stamp the minute entry at the direction of the judge.
. Becker has waived appellate review of several other claims. Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 28(a)(9)(A) requires appellants to sufficiently raise all issues and arguments on which they desire appellate review in their opening brief. An issue or argument insufficiently raised in the opening brief is deemed waived.
Headrick v. Rockwell Int'l Corp.,
. Becker does not distinguish between her Fourth Amendment-based search and seizure claims (as applied to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment) and her procedural due process claims. We address these arguments separately for the sake of analytical clarity.
. Procedural due process ensures that individuals are entitled to certain procedural safeguards before a state can deprive them of life, liberty or property.
See Albright,
. In apparent regard for this holding in Al-bright, Becker presents her malicious prosecution claims under a heading separate from her substantive due process claims based on a right to be free from criminal prosecution designed to extort money. We consider that the gravamen of Becker’s complaint under both theories is that she was prosecuted without probable cause. Accordingly, we address her substantive due process arguments here under the heading of malicious prosecution but determine that, even if Albright does not foreclose her claim, she has not presented a substantive due process violation.
. She claims the following are procedural due process violations: (1) the absence of probable cause for the subpoena, (2) lack of notice that her case file had been sealed, (3) service of the subpoena by an interested party, (4) requiring travel to Salt Lake City to challenge the subpoena, (5) failure to make a return of service of the subpoena, (6) subsequently informing Gardner that the records had been obtained voluntarily, and (7) hiding exculpatory information. Aplt. Br. 32-38. Becker also argues these circumstances amount to a Fourth Amendment violation.
. The Sixth Circuit, however, after
Albright,
has analyzed malicious prosecution-type claims based on ongoing custody under the Fourth Amendment rather than due process.
Gregory v. City of Louisville,
. Even if we agreed that Becker has stated a substantive due process claim, given the novel nature of Becker’s theory when compared with earlier cases, qualified immunity would likely apply to the officials involved.
See Holland,
. After the
Moran
case was remanded to the trial court and appealed again, the court hearing the second appeal apparently rejected
Albright's
language limiting § 1983 malicious prosecution to claims based on the Fourth Amendment because the challenged conduct was “well beyond the realm of malicious prosecution” in light of the "purposeful conspiracy” involved.
Moran v. Clarke,
. We have also recognized in the context of malicious prosecution a cause of action against a person who influences the decision to prosecute but does not initiate criminal proceedings.
Pierce,
. The Supreme Court issued Hartman after briefing took place in this case, so neither the *926 parties nor the district court had the opportunity to directly address the absence of рrobable cause in the retaliatory prosecution context either in proceedings below or before this court.
. In the second order granting summary judgement to Kroll and Wright on malicious prosecution, the district court noted that “Dr. Becker has created factual disputes as to whether defendants Kroll and Wright deliberately supplied misleading information that resulted in Dr. Becker being charged and prosecuted. The same holds true with respect to whether Mr. Kroll and Mr. Wright suppressed exculpatory evidence that resulted in Dr. Becker’s continuing prosecution.” Aplt.App. 46. But it never applied these findings to Becker's retaliation claims.
. Section 63-30-4 was repealed in July 2004. It has been replaced by Utah Code Ann. § 63-30d-202. The differences between the two statutes are minor. Because § 63-30-4 was the law in effect at the time of the alleged libel, we refer to it.
. Becker also argues she is entitled to the "fraud” exception in § 63 — 30—4(3)(b)(I). She has never articulated, however, how she meets the elements of a fraud claim against Gardner and Evans.
See Gold Standard, Inc.
v.
Getty Oil Co.,
. We DENY Becker’s Motion for Permission to Supplement the Record dated November 10, 2005.
