This case arises out of a series of apparent blunders on the part of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), leading to the wrongful conviction of two men on bank robbery charges. After the truth came to light, the trial court set aside the convictions. The men then sued the United States under the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA), 28 U.S.C. §§ 1346(b), 2671-2680. Following a bench trial, the district court denied relief.
See Bolduc v. United States,
*52 On appeal, we think it more orderly to treat the question of jurisdiction as a threshold matter. Concluding, as we do, that the FTCA does not support the assertion of federal subject matter jurisdiction, we affirm the judgment on that alternative ground.
I. BACKGROUND
The chronicle of relevant events takes us back more than sixteen years. We recount the facts as supportably found by the district court. See id. at 155-69.
On June 28,1988, two middle-aged white men attempted to rob a branch of the First Wisconsin Bank situated at the Southgate Mall in Greenfield, Wisconsin. The FBI mounted an investigation into the Southgate incident. Agent Daniel Craft led the probe. Because the thieves came away from Southgate empty-handed, Craft considered the crime a “nothing robbery” and delegated substantial investigative responsibility to a rookie, Agent Derrel Craig.
On November 15, 1988, Craft and Craig rounded up four Southgate eyewitnesses and showed them a photographic array. The array did not include pictures of either the appellants or the men who ultimаtely were determined to be the actual culprits. Nevertheless, two of the four eyewitnesses selected the photographs of Allan Daniel Wilwerding and Douglas Wayne Thompson as depictions of the robbers, and another eyewitness fingered Wil-werding. The agents recorded the results in separate memos, known in FBI parlance as 302 reports. The two sets of reports attributed different levels of certitude to the eyewitness identifications: Craft’s reports indicated that two of the eyewitnesses had described Wilwerding and Thompson as “similar” to the robbers whereas Craig’s reports noted that those eyewitnesses had identified the men as “identical” to the robbers. The reports regarding the eyewitness who had identified only Wilwerding were also inconsistent; again, Craft’s report attributed a “similar” identification to that eyewitness whereas Craig’s report recorded an “identical” match.
As lead investigator, Craft bore responsibility for finalizing the 302 reports by reviewing them for errors and initialing them. According to FBI policy, once Craft finalized the 302 reports, he was required to place them in the case file. The court below found that, in this instance, Craft ignored this policy and excluded Craig’s 302 reports from the case file because he unilaterally decided that they inaccurately reported the strength of the identifications. Id. at 157. The court also found it doubtful that Craft’s 302 reports were in the case file when the FBI turned it over to the United States Attorney. Id. It is undisputed that FBI agents have no discrеtion to withhold particular 302 reports from a case file. See id.
On October 18, 1989, two middle-aged white men stuck up the Oklahoma Avenue branch of the First Wisconsin Bank in Milwaukee and absconded with $400,000. Agent Craft again took the lead in the ensuing investigation. This time, however, his aide-de-camp was Agent Margaret Cronin. The general description of the Oklahoma Avenue perpetrators reminded Cronin, a Boston native, of an article she had read in a Boston newspaper describing arrests in Lowell, Massachusetts, following an armored car robbery in nearby Chelms-ford. Those arrested included two middle-aged white men, and Cronin thought that she perceived some similarities.
In early 1990, on Cronin’s initiative, the Milwaukee office of the FBI included photographs of plaintiffs-appellants Frank Bolduc and Francis Larkin (each of whom had been detained in connection with the *53 Chelmsford armored car robbery) in an array displayed to the Southgate and Oklahoma Avenue eyewitnesses. 1 Some witnesses identified Bolduc and/or Larkin as the culprits; others were unable to make any positive identifications at that time. Encouraged to some extent by these results, the FBI arranged to have the appellants transported to Wisconsin and placed them in a lineup. Several (but not all) of the eyewitnesses to the Southgate and Oklahoma Avenue incidents identified them as the robbers. A federal grand jury, sitting in Milwaukee, subsequently indicted the appellants for the attempted armed robbery of Southgate аnd the armed robbery of Oklahoma Avenue, see 18 U.S.C. § 2113, and for related firearms offenses, see id. § 924(c)(1).
The trial went forward in February of 1991. The prosecution relied entirely upon eyewitness identifications, including the testimony of the same three witnesses who previously had identified others (Wil-werding and Thompson) as “similar” or “identical” to the Southgate bandits; this time, the trio made positive identifications of Bolduc and/or Larkin. Neither the prosecutor nor the witnesses themselves mentioned their earlier (inconsistent) match-ups. The defense relied mainly upon alibi testimony indicating that the appellants were in the Boston area when the crimes were committed. The jury found the appellants guilty of all charges and, on May 24, 1991, the district court sentenced bоth men to serve lengthy prison terms. 2
Following the imposition of sentence, federal officials returned Bolduc to a Massachusetts state penitentiary to resume serving a life sentence for an earlier second-degree murder conviction, which the parole board had reinstated upon Bolduc’s arrest for his putative involvement in the Chelmsford armored car robbery. Upon learning of the federal convictions, however, Massachusetts authorities decided to dismiss the charges pending against Bol-duc and Larkin with respect to the armored car caper. In their view, the appellants’ ages and the length of their federal sentences contradicted the need to seek additional prison time. Despite this dеcision, the Massachusetts parole board determined that Bolduc’s federal conviction furnished sufficient grounds to support the revocation of his parole and, therefore, he remained in state prison.
Notwithstanding the appellants’ arrests and incarceration, similar robberies continued to plague Midwestern banks. More than six years after the appellants were sentenced, the FBI arrested William Kirkpatrick on suspicion of involvement in several of the more recent robberies. Though incarcerated, Bolduc caught wind of this turn of events and asked Kirkpatrick’s attorney for any available information about the Southgate and Oklahoma Avenue robberies. The lawyer sent Bolduc a packet containing, inter alia, Agent Craig’s 302 reports anent the November 1988 photo array. It was in that roundabout way that Bolduc first learned of this exculpatory *54 evidence. Larkin learned of the evidence at an even later date.
In' time, Kirkpatrick confessed that he and a partner had undertaken both the Southgate and Oklahoma Avenue heists. The appellants filed federal habeas petitions, see '28 U.S.C. § 2255, which the government did not oppose. On June 11, 1999, a federal district judge granted the petitions, vacated the appellants’ sentences, and issued certificates of innocence. Larkin was released from federal custody and Bolduc, relying on the certificate of innocence, successfully petitioned the Massachusetts parole board for reinstatement of his parole.
II. TRAVEL OF THE CASE
Following their release, the appellants commenced a civil action in the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts in an effort to recover money damages for the eight years that they had languished in prison. Their complaint presented claims under the FTCA against the United States for malicious prosecution, false, imprisonment, abuse of process, and negligent supervision, as well as a
Bivens
claim against Agent Craft,
see Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents of FBN,
The parties engaged in extensive discovery. The government challenged the existence of subject matter jurisdiction for the first time in a motion served almost two months after the deadline for filing dispositive motions had passed. Subject matter jurisdiction is not waivable, and a party cannot confer subject matter jurisdiction upon a federal court by failing to assert that defense in a timely manner.
See Quinn v. City of Boston,
The appellants’ two remaining claims-negligence and negligent supervision under the FTCA-were tried to the distinct court for four days. The court then requested post-trial briefing. The government’s memorandum raised a litany of defenses, including a renewed plea that the court lacked subject matter jurisdiction.
On July 2, 2003, the district court filed a lengthy rescript in which it ordered judgment in favor of the United States on the ground that the appellants had not proved that the FBI’s failure to provide the excul
*55
patory 302 reports had harmed them.
See Bolduc,
III. SUBJECT MATTER JURISDICTION
Consistent with the foregoing, we turn directly to the jurisdictional issue. We begin with first principles: it is apodictic that “[a]s a sovereign nation, the United States is immune from liability except to the extent that it consents to suit.”
Dynamic Image Techs., Inc. v. United States,
That grant extends to claims
against the United States, for money damages, accruing оn and after January 1, 1945, for injury or loss of property, or personal injury or death caused by the negligent or wrongful act or omission of :any employee of the Government while acting- within the scope of his office or employment, under circumstances where the United States, if a private person, would be liable to the claimant in accordance with the law of the place where the act or omission occurred.'
28 U.S.C. § 1346(b)(1). A further explication of the last clause is to be found in 28 U.S.C. § 2674, which provides that the United States only “shall be liable ... in the same manner and to the same extent as a private individual under like, circumstances.” A bundle of exceptions, mostly in the-nature of exclusions and carve-outs, circumscribes the FTCA’s waivеr of sovereign immunity.
See
28 U.S.C. § 2680(a)-
*56
(n);
see also Dynamic Image Techs.,
We add a caveat. As with all waivers of sovereign immunity, the FTCA must be “construed strictly in favor of the federal government, and must not be enlarged beyond such boundaries as its language plainly requires.”
United States v. Horn,
As said, the appellants prosecuted two FTCA claims: one for negligence (based on Agent Craft’s alleged failure to include the above-described 302s in the case file turned over to federal prosecutors and ultimately to the defense) and one for negligent supervision (based on the alleged failure of Craft’s superiors to oversee him more closely). We consider the jurisdictional bona fides of each claim separately.
A. The Negligence Claim.
The “law of the place” рrovides the substantive rules to be used in deciding FTCA actions. 28 U.S.C. § 1346(b)(1). The phrase “law of the place” refers to the law of the state in which the allegedly tortious acts or omissions occurred.
See Meyer,
To maintain a cause of action for negligence in Wisconsin, a plaintiff must show “(1) [a] duty of care on the part of the defendant; (2) a breach of that duty;
*57
(3) a causal connection between the- conduct and the injury; and (4) an actual loss or damage as a result of the injury.”
Rockweit v. Senecal,
To satisfy the duty prong, the appellants rely in part on the duty of state government (and, particularly, state prosecutors) to disclose exculpatory evidence.
See, e.g.,
Appellants’ Reply Br. at 5-6 (citing Wis. Stat. § 971.23(1)). This effort is unconvincing. By the FTCA’s plain terms, a waiver of sovereign immunity attaches only where “a
private person
[ ] would be held liable.” 28 U.S.C. § 1346(b)(1) (emphasis supplied). The appellants have not pointed to any instance in which Wisconsin has imposed
private
liability on a prosеcutor or other state agent for a failure to disclose exculpatory evidence. That is a fatal flaw, for the federal government does not yield its immunity with respect to obligations that are peculiar to governments or official-capacity state actors and which have no private counterpart in state law.
See Franco de Jerez v. Burgos,
This conclusion does not end our inquiry. We nonetheless must inquire whether there is any way in which Wisconsin might impose tort liability upon a private party under circumstances sufficiently similar to those present in this case, that is, a person who comes into possession of exculpatory evidence as part of an official investigation and carelessly fails to disclose that evidence to prosecutors (and, ultimately, to the accused). This means, in effect, that we must look for “some relationship between the governmental employеe[s] and plaintiff to which, state law would attach a duty of care in purely private circumstances.”
Sea Air Shuttle,
In formulating its test for negligence, Wisconsin has adopted a broad definition of the element of duty.
See A.E. Inv. Corp. v. Link Builders, Inc.,
This formulation easts a wide net. Indeed, the Wisconsin Supreme Court — the most authoritative arbiter of Wisconsin law — has ruminated that “[i]n Wisconsin, everyone has a duty of care to the whole world.”
Miller v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.,
*58
Even if we assume the existence of such a duty, that assumption does not take the appellants as far as they need to go. Under the FTCA, the relevant inquiry is not whether state law might assign a duty to a private person in the same or similar circumstances, but, rather, whether state law would impose liability on a private person in the same or similar circumstances.
See
28 U.S.C. §§ 1346(b)(1), 2674. The stating of a claim for negligence (the failure to exercise due care by one having a general duty to do so in the face of foreseeable harm) does not automatically mean that liability would attach under Wisconsin law. The contrary is true: “[i]n Wisconsin, the doctrine of public policy, not the doctrine of duty, limits the scope of a defendant’s liability.”
Bowen,
The question of whether public policy precludes tort liability is “a question of law solely for judicial decision.”
Morgan v. Pa. Gen. Ins. Co.,
In
Bromund v. Holt,
The court then undertook a public policy analysis to determine whether imposing liability on the doctor would be appropriate. It began by noting that “[t]he law, for reasons of policy, closely circumscribes the types of causes of action which may arise against those who participate in law enforcement activity or in the functioning of the judicial system.” Id. at 152. It went on to observe that, in civil litigation, such defendants often have a relationship *59 to the judicial process that affords them immunity from private liability. See id. (citing the protections afforded to, inter alios, prosecutors and witnesses). It next determined thаt, even when a defendant’s relationship to the judicial process does not afford a specific immunity, “he is still not held liable to the person who has been subjected to unjustifiable prosecution in the absence of malice.” Id. at 153.
The court’s reasoning is instructive. In its view, law enforcement and the safeguarding of society from crime would suffer if government agents (and outsiders hired to assist in law enforcement activities) were subject to private liability for damages arising from simple negligence in the performance of their duties. See id. at 153-54. The Bromund court held that:
even if a person employed by the public to assist in law enforcement ... does not enjoy immunity, ... the same considerations of public policy which require proof of malice as an element of an action for malicious prosecution or defamation under these circumstances must exclude liability founded upon mere negligence. In our opinion, the interest in freedom from unjustifiable criminal litigation is, as a matter of policy, not protected from unintentional tort.
Id. at 154.
This holding has particular pertinence for present purposes. Assuming arguendo that the appellants could demonstrate negligence, causation, and actual harm — a matter on which we take no view — Wisconsin law nonetheless would preclude the imposition of private liability on a private person in circumstances similar to those of Agent Craft. 7 Under Bromund, malice is a prerequisite for imposing private tort liability upon a private individual working with law enforcement when the performance of his duties has resulted in an unjustifiable criminal prosecution and/or conviction. See id. at 153-54. Because the appellants have failed to offer a scintilla of proof of malice, they have failed to establish a basis under the law of the place for imposing liability upon a private person in like circumstances. Consequently, we hold that the FTCA does not waive the federal government’s sovereign immunity vis-a-vis the appellants’ negligence claim. It follows inexorably that there is no federal subject matter jurisdiction over that component of the case.
B. The Negligent Supervision Claim.
This leaves the negligent supervision claim. Wisconsin recognizes the tort of negligent supervision.
Miller,
We need not hazard a public policy analysis to determine whether а private employer in like circumstances would face liability for negligent supervision under Wisconsin law. Even if the appellants could successfully urge the affirmative of that proposition-a matter on which we do not opine-the discretionary function exception to the FTCA, 28 U.S.C. § 2680(a), would divest the federal courts of jurisdiction over this claim. We explain briefly.
The FTCA insulates the United States from “[a]ny claim ... based upon the exercise or performance or the failure to exercise or perform a discretionary function or duty on the part of a federal agency or an employee of the Government, whether or not the discretion involved be abused.”
Id.
This proviso balances “Congress’ willingness to impose tort liability upon the United States and its desire to protect certain governmental activities from exposure to suit by private individuals.”
United States v. Varig Airlines,
To determine whether the discretionary function proviso applies, an inquiring court must first identify the government conduct giving rise to the claim in question.
Muniz-Rivera v. United States,
The first part of that analysis asks whether the conduct itself is discretionary, that is, “a matter of choice for the acting employee.”
Berkovitz,
Decisions are thought to be susceptible to policy-related judgments if they involve an “unrestrained balancing of incommensurable values,” including a differentiаl allocation of resources among various political objectives.
See Shansky v. United States,
Against this backdrop, the appellants argue that the FBI had an obligation under federal law to disclose exculpatory evidence to them and, therefore, that the
*61
conduct relevant to their claim was not discretionary. This argument confuses the ministerial duty of FBI agents to plаce all S02 reports in the case file with the responsibility of FBI supervisors to oversee the work of the agents under their command. It is the latter activity that gives rise to the negligent supervision claim. On this issue, it is irrelevant whether Agent Craft had discretion to determine whether particular 302 reports should be left out of the case file.
See Attallah,
Having identified the relevant activity — the FBI’s oversight of Agent Craft’s handling of the 302s — we next must consider whether that activity is discretionary and susceptible to policy-related judgments. The appellants assign fault at a general level to the quality of the supervision. At trial, they adduced evidence that Agent Craft sometimes initialed 302 reports and other documents without reviewing them thoroughly (even though his supervisors had advised him to be more fastidious in performing that task) and that one supervisor had written a performance appraisal suggesting that Craft had room for improvement in this area. The appellants have not shown, however, that Craft’s supervisors were constrained by any law, regulation, or policy to respond in a particular way upon learning that an agent was not proficient at a particular task. By the same token, they have not adverted to any federal statute, regulation, or policy that dictates a specific regime of oversight that FBI hierarchs must practice to ensure that agents handle exculpatory evidence properly. Where no specific action is required within a category of conduct and the government actors in question have latitude to make decisions and choose among alternative courses of action, the conduct is discretionary.
See Irving,
If more were needed — and we doubt that it is — this court has recognized, in the context of supervision, that in the absence of a statutory or regulatory regime that sets out particulars as to how an agency must fulfill its mandate, the development and management of a supervisory model is a matter of agency discretion.
Attallah
illustrates the point. There, we held that supervisory decisions
of
the Customs Service concerning the oversight of customs agents were discretionary in nature.
See Attallah,
The appellants argue that, notwithstanding this precedent, the supervisory decision here is beyond the domain of discretion. They assert that even if a claim for negligent supervision would generally be barred, the bar should not apply here because it is unlawful for a member of the prosecution team to withhold exculpatory evidence and it cannot be within an official’s discretion to permit unlawful behavior. To bolster this construct, they cite
Tonelli v. United States,
Tonelli is easily distinguishable. The court there recognized that “[ijssues of employee supervision ... generally involve the permissible exercise of policy judgment and fall within the discretionary function exception,” id., but left open the possibility that an employer who had notice of ongoing illegal activity would not be entitled to claim that a failure to act was within the scope of discretion, see id. It therefore determined that summary judgment would be inappropriate because a *62 factual dispute persisted over whether the employer had notice of the illegal actions of its employees. Id. In this case, unlike in Tonelli, we have the benefit of a full trial record, and we find nothing to support the prеmise that FBI supervisors in the Milwaukee office had notice of any illegal employee activity. As a result, we need not decide whether that situation would be subject to the conclusions that we otherwise reach.
That ends this aspect of the matter. In
Attallah,
we commented that supervision over customs agents “certainly involves a degree of discretion ... of the kind that Congress sought to protect through the discretionary function exception.”
We come, then, to the question of whether this discretionary conduct was grounded in policy. On that issue, the government benefits from the presumption that a supervisor’s discretionary acts are grounded in policy.
See United States v. Gaubert,
To say more on this point would be to paint the lily. Based on the foregoing, we hold that the discretionary function proviso, 28 U.S.C. § 2680(a), divests the federal courts of jurisdiction over the appellants’ claim of negligent supervision. 8
IV. CONCLUSION
This is a sad case. It shows that even the nation’s premier law enfоrcement agency sometimes bungles. But Congress has never enacted a wholesale waiver of the federal government’s sovereign immunity from suit, so it is unsurprising that the FTCA does not cover every error by a federal agent. Neither of the two claims at issue here — one for negligence and the other for negligent supervision — comes within the carapace of the carefully limited waiver of federal sovereign immunity that the FTCA denotes.
We need go no further. We hold that the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to hear the appellants’ claims. On this ground, we affirm the entry of judgment in favor of the United States.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Larkin died while this suit was pending and the administrator of his estate has been substituted as a party plaintiff in his place and stead. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 25(a).
. The cоurt sentenced Bolduc to 280 months for the attempted robbery at Southgate (count 1), 60 months for a related firearms charge (count 2), 280 months for the Oklahoma Avenue robbery (count 3), and 240 months for a related firearms charge (count 4). The sentences on counts 1 and 3 were to run concurrently, followed by the sentence for count 2 and, finally, the sentence for count 4. The court sentenced Larkin to concurrent terms for counts 1 and 3 (each 90 months), followed by a consecutive 60-month term for count 2 and a further consecutive 240-month term for count 4.
. On October 21, 2002, the lower court granted the appellants’ motion to transfer the claim against Craft to the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin. The docket of that court does not indicate that the appellants ever perfected the transfer.
. We recognize that, in some circumstances, a court may avoid a jurisdictional quandary if a tidier resolution on the merits will dispose of the case in favor of the party challenging jurisdiction.
See, e.g., United States v. Stoller,
. Only two of these exceptions are relevant to this case. They state in pertinent part that the provisions of the FTCA shall not apply to:
(a) Any claim based uрon an act or omission of an employee of the Government ... based upon the exercise or performance or the failure to exercise or perform a discretionary function or duty on the part of a federal agency ....
(h) Any claim arising out of assault, battery, false imprisonment, false arrest, malicious prosecution, abuse of process, libel, slander, misrepresentation, deceit, or interference with contract rights [subject to certain provisos] ....
28 U.S.C. § 2680(a), (h).
. Broadly stated,
Brady
imposes a constitutional duty on prosecutors to turn over exculpatory evidence to a defendant in a criminal case.
See Brady,
. A party can, of course, maintain actions for malicious prosecution or abuse of procеss under Wisconsin law. The appellants asserted such claims here. The district court dismissed the malicious prosecution claim for failure to plead the necessary element of malice and the abuse of process claim for failure to assert that the withholding of the 302s was willful or done with an ulterior purpose.
Bolduc v. United States,
No. 01-CV-11376,
. For consistency’s sake, we affirm the entry of judgment in favor of the United States with respect to this claim on an available jurisdictional ground. We note, however, that we have scoured the record and have found no support for the contention that any negligence on the part of FBI supervisors was a cause-in-fact of Agent Craft’s failure to place the 302s in the case file.
