MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
In this action plaintiff alleges negligent and/or tortious conduct on the part of United States’ employees. The facts, viewed in the light most favorable to plaintiff, are as follows. Alarmed by the sale of illegal drugs in the Coatesville Veterans Administration Hospital, James L.G. Parsons, II, director of the hospital, and Peter J. Mango, chief of the hospital’s police force, decided to conduct an undercover investigation. Curtis Kimmel, a V.A. police officer, was assigned to the undercover investigation and John Cantrell, a hospital clothing clerk, was utilized as an informant. As is the ease with some informants, Cantrell’s reputation was not as a vestal virgin it being alleged that he was known to be both mentally deficient and a drug user.
Shortly after commencement of Cantrell’s undercover activities, and based upon information supplied by Cantrell, Officer Kimmel caused a criminal complaint to be filed against plaintiff. This complaint charged plaintiff with “possession, possession with intent to deliver and delivery of a controlled substance, to wit: marijuana.” Because of weaknesses in the government’s evidence, this criminal action was nolle prossed by the Chester County District Attorney’s Office. However, the allegation that plaintiff was a drug dealer did result in plaintiff’s dismissal from employment at the V.A. hospital.
Based on the foregoing, plaintiff caused a Bivens type action to be filed against Curtis Kimmel, John Cantrell, and James Parsons. Approximately two weeks prior to the scheduled trial date for'the Bivens action, plaintiff filed this complaint asserting, a cause of action directly against the United States pursuant to the Federal Tort Claims Act (“FTCA”). 28 U.S.C. § 1346(b). Presently before me is the government’s motion to. dismiss the FTCA action. In this motion, the government asserts the conduct complained of is within the “discretionary function” exception to the waiver of sovereign immunity contained in the FTCA. For the reasons that follow, the government’s motion will be granted.
The “discretionary function” exception
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to the Federal Tort Claims Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2680(a), has resulted in much litigation with judicial precedent difficult to harmonize.
See Bernitsky v. United States,
One of the earliest, and easily the most famous case on the subject is
Dalehite v. United States,
From this Supreme Court language was born what is termed the planning level/operational level test for use in determining the contours of the discretionary function exception.
See Lindgren v. United States,
From the beginning the planning level/operational level test proved troublesome. As stated by Judge Becker, in one of the most comprehensive opinions on the subject, the “planning/operational distinction, instructive as it may be on a theoretical level, can become exceedingly problematic when applied to concrete facts.”
Blessing v. United States,
In place of the planning/operational distinction, the Supreme Court in
Varig Airlines,
and the Third Circuit in its recent decisions utilize the reasoning employed by the Sixth Circuit in
Downs v. United States,
In this case, plaintiff has challenged four areas of conduct. First, he alleges government employees were negligent in using Cantrell as an informant because of his questionable mental capacity and moral character. Secondly, plaintiff alleges negligence in the supervision of Cantrell. More specifically, plaintiff alleges Curtis Kimmel failed to follow accepted procedures for the use of undercover drug informants. Third, plaintiff alleges Officer Kimmel acted in bad faith in causing criminal charges to be filed. And finally, plaintiff alleges his arrest, coupled with Kimmel’s bad faith in bringing criminal charges, constitutes the tort of false arrest. Reduced to their core, plaintiff’s allegations challenge the methods used by federal employees in investigating criminal offenses and their reliance on these procedures in causing criminal charges to be filed.
The decision to prosecute a given individual is the quintessential example of discretionary conduct.
See Accardi v. United States,
With these principles in hand, the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, when presented with a similar factual scenerio, found a plaintiff’s action barred by the discretionary function exception.
Gray v. Bell,
I fully agree with
Gray
to the extent it holds separating allegations of improper investigatory techniques from the decision to prosecute would be an exercise in semantic obfuscation. Deciding how to investigate, who to investigate, and how to present evidence to the proper authorities are classic examples of immunized prosecutorial conduct.
See Imbler v. Pachtman,
Plaintiff’s allegations that Officer Kimmel failed to disclose to the prosecuting authorities the weaknesses in his evidence
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and that Kimmel initiated criminal proceedings only to “save face” does not require a different result. Complaint ¶ 19. Despite plaintiff’s allegations of intentional conduct, his response to defendant’s summary judgment motion contains no supporting evidence. At best, the record shows that government employees may have been negligent in their decision as to what evidence should have been presented.
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Accordingly,' this case is easily distinguishable from cases where a government agent intentionally gave false evidence in order to prosecute an individual,
see Heywood v. United States,
In reaching the foregoing conclusion I am fully mindful of the standards guiding the grant of summary judgment.
See Continental Insurance Co. v. Bodie,
In this case the only evidence adduced by plaintiff suggests a negligent investigation and a decision to prosecute which in itself may have been negligent because of the tenuousness of the evidence. While in the typical case it could be argued that this factual evidence is enough to get to the jury, such evidence is insufficient in matters like that presented
sub judice.
Otherwise, federal law enforcement personnel would be continually placed between the scylla of acting too quickly thereby evidencing maliciousness and the charybdis of acting too slowly thereby negligently permitting dangerous elements to roam loose in the population.
See, e.g., Bergmann v. United States,
In essence, to accept plaintiff’s theory of negligent prosecution would be to allow a plaintiff to bypass the well established rule that prosecutorial decisions are protected merely by alleging he was arrested, had the charges dismissed, the arresting officer
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did A, B, and C when with the benefit of hindsight it would have been better for him to do X, Y, and Z, had the officer done X, Y, and Z plaintiff would not have been arrested, and therefore, malice existed on the part of the officer. Such a theory is entirely too foreign to the well-established principle that prosecutorial decisions are protected even if those decisions evidence an abuse of discretion.
See Estate of Callas v. United States,
Finally, I recognize that other courts would not necessarily agree with my analysis. For instance, in
Wright v. United States,
Wright
and
Gray,
represent the polar extremes, and I concur in the reasoning and the result reached in
Gray.
Furthermore, my analysis of other cases leads me to believe the majority of courts would also follow
Gray.
For example, in
Caban v. United States,
For all of the above reasons, I find plaintiff's complaint must be dismissed.
Notes
. As an initial matter plaintiff has argued that because he has alleged malicious prosecution and false arrest on the part of an "investigative officer,” section 2680(h) applies to the exclusion of the discretionary function exception of section 2680(a). However, for the reasons expressed by the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, I refuse to adopt such a construction of the statute.
See Gray v. Bell,
. Even prior to
Varig Airlines,
the Third Circuit characterized the planning level-operational level distinction as an ineffective "semantic attempt to decide in which category [a] case falls.”
Bernitsky v. United States,
. The issue of negligence, however, "is not relevant to the discretionary function inquiry” because if discretionary even negligent conduct is protected.
General Public Utilities Corp. v. United States,
. Both of these actions were found barred by the discretionary function exception.
