This case involves First Amendment claims brought by a police officer under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The ¿strict court denied the individual defendants’ motion for summary judgment based on qualified immunity. We reverse.
BACKGROUND
Plaintiff Brent K. Hansen is a police officer for the City of Sunrise, Florida (“City”). Hansen was subpoenaed to provide deposition testimony in the criminal prosecution of a former City police officer, Martin Singer. Singer had been arrested for burglary. Hansen gave the deposition testimony in July 1989.
During the deposition, Hansen criticized the City Police Department for prosecuting Singer. Hansen called the Singer arrest “ridiculous,” “stupid,” and “the dumbest thing I’ve ever seen since I’ve been working there;” Hansen recalled arriving on the scene of Singer’s arrest and asking “how the fuck is that a good arrest?” He attributed the arrest to the “inexperience” of the officers involved, adding that “no one seems to give a shit up top” about the alleged inexperience and disorganization.
Hansen was also asked whether he had worked with Singer. Noting that Singеr was a member of his squad, Hansen recalled praising Singer in an evaluation: “[H]e does real good.... [But] I’ve got to hear shit like what are you doing giving such a high evaluation which is a bunch of crap. And I don’t have to listen to that.”
In April 1990, defendant John G. Solden-wagner, the City’s Chief of Police, learned of the testimony and ordered an Internal Affairs invеstigation. Shortly thereafter (but shortly before the scheduled start of Singer’s criminal trial), defendants Raymond Malecki and John Puleo, officers in the Internal Affairs Division, conducted a hearing. Before the hearing, Chief Soldenwagner notified Hansen that the investigation charged him with “Conduct impairing efficiency of the Department to the detrimеnt of discipline and/or public acceptance of the Department.”
At the outset of the investigation, Hansen was assigned to desk duty, a step which was consistent with the department’s “general policy.” Hansen’s salary was not reduced. The investigation concluded in September 1991, with a recommendation by Soldenwag-ner that Hansen be terminated. City Manager Patrick Salerno reduced the proposed disciplinary action to a five-day suspension.
Hansen filed a written grievance requesting that his suspension be reconsidered. Hansen admitted in the grievance that his *575 “conduct [in the Singer deposition] was unprofessional.” Soldenwagner denied Hаnsen’s request. In Hansen’s final administrative appeal, Police Personnel Director James Harris concluded that the suspension was proper.
Hansen filed this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Hansen alleged that defendants Ma-léela and Puleo, acting individually and in conspiracy with Soldenwagner, violated Hansen’s First Amendment rights by investigating him and suspending him. Hansеn also suggests that the investigation was initiated to deter him from testifying freely in Singer’s trial. Defendants’ motion for summary judgment was denied. Defendants appeal, reasserting the qualified immunity defense. We review this issue de novo.
Hutton v. Strickland,
QUALIFIED IMMUNITY
Qualified immunity protects government officials performing discretionary functions from civil liability if their conduct violates no “clеarly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.”
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
To be established clearly, a right must be so particularized that “in the light of pre-existing law the unlawfulness must be apparent.”
Anderson v. Creighton,
When considering whether the law applicable to certain facts is clearly established, the facts of cases relied upon as precedent are important. The facts need not be the same as the facts of the immediate case. But they do need to be materially similar. See, e.g., Edwards v. Gilbert,867 F.2d 1271 , 1277 (11th Cir.1989). Public officials are not obligated to be creative or imaginative in drawing analogiеs from previously decided cases.
Adams v. St. Lucie County Sheriff’s Dept.,
The question before us is not whether, in general, public employees enjoy some freedom under the First Amendment to speak on matters of public concern; they do. Nor is the question whether public employees have an interest in providing truthful testimony in criminal cases; they do. Here, as in all qualified immunity cases, the question is fact specific: in April 1990, was it clearly established in this circuit that it was unconstitutional for police officials to investigate and to suspend an officer for making vulgar, insulting, and defiant criticisms of the department while giving testimony at a deposition pursuant to a subpoena? The answer is “No.”
Past cases show that defendants who allegedly violate public employees’ First Amendment freedoms rarely act within “clearly established” contours of law:
The Supreme Court has never established a bright-line standard for determining when the State as an employer may take action adverse to an employee in response to thаt employee’s speech. Instead, the Court has balanced the interest of the employee in commenting on matters of public concern against the interest of the employer in performing public services efficiently.
Dartland v. Metropolitan Dade County,
Because
Pickering
requires a balancing of competing interests on a case-by-case basis, our decisiоns tilt strongly in favor of immunity by recognizing that only in the rarest of cases will reasonable government officials truly know that the termination or discipline of a public employee violated “clearly established” federal rights.
1
See Dartland,
Hansen suggests that
Pickering
balancing is no good here; because he was subpoenaed, he says he enjoys an absolute First Amendment right to respond to deposition questions in the manner he chooses. That witnesses (without fear оf unwarranted reprisal from government employers) be able to testify truthfully in court proceedings is a matter of public importance.
2
Public employees who allegedly suffer retaliation for providing testimony can enjoy protection under the First Amendment,
see, e.g., Reeves v. Claiborne County Bd. of Educ.,
In
Martinez v. City of Opa-Locka, Fla.,
*577
Several considerations reveal that
Pickering
balancing, when applied to these facts, would not yield the “inevitable” result necessary for denying immunity.
4
Precedents recognize that the manner of a public employee’s speech is an important element in the
Pickering
balance.
See Morales v. Stierheim,
Another fact that keeps the
Pickering
balance from falling “inevitably” in Hansen’s favor is that some of his speech was not responsive to the questions put to him at the deposition. In such instances, the public interest considerations that flow from one’s speaking as a subpoenaed witness are weakened,
if
they exist at all.
5
Cf. Arvinger,
In this case, the
Pickering
balance is also affected — and its outcome made doubtful— by the special concerns of quasi-military organizations such as police departments. Order and mоrale are critical to successful police work: a police department is “a paramilitary organization, with a need to secure discipline, mutual respect, trust and particular efficiency among the ranks due to its status as a quasi-military entity different from other public employers.”
Bryson v. City of Waycross,
No. CV588-017,
In his deposition, Hansen did not just describe events; he offered his opinion аbout
*578
the correctness of other officers’ acts and judgments. He ridiculed as inexperienced the officers involved in the Singer arrest; he raked his superiors, claiming that “no one seems to give a shit up top” about the problems he perceived; Hansen lamented that he had to endure “shit” like criticism for his favorable review of Singer, defiantly claiming “I don’t have to listen to that.”
Cf. Busby,
Because this is not an “extraordinary” case in which the First Amendment conclusion would inevitably favor Hansen in the light of Pickering balancing, we conclude that the pre-existing law did not clearly establish that what defendants did was a violation of the First Amendment. Thеrefore, we hold that defendants in their individual capacity are entitled to qualified immunity. 6
But Hansen says that summary judgment was still properly denied because there remain issues of fact about defendants’ subjective motivation. That is, Hansen argues that a trial is required to determine whether defendants’ proffered reasons for the investigation and suspension actually controlled. Hansen contends that defendants conducted the investigation to retaliate against his deposition testimony or to chill his testimony in Singer’s trial, or both — not to maintain proper discipline within the police force.
For qualified immunity purposes, the subjective motivation of the defendаnt-official is immaterial.
Anderson,
CONCLUSION
Because defendants are entitled to qualified immunity, we REVERSE the denial of summary judgment to defendants in their individual capacities and REMAND for further proceedings.
Notes
. Pickering-style balancing cases illustrate the importance of
Adams'
requirement that plaintiffs cite cases with materially similar facts when asserting that "clearly established” rights were violated.
Adams,
. For the purposes of this appeal, we have assumed that Hansen testified truthfully.
. In
Hoopes v. Nacrelli,
In
Arvinger v. Mayor and City Council of Baltimore,
Nor do courts afford absolute protection to private employees for testimonial speech.
See, e.g., Phillips v. Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co.,
. Because the only question in this case involvеs qualified immunity, we need not consider the actual result of a
Pickering
test. We simply illustrate why reasonable officers in these defendants’ places would not
necessarily
know that their acts violated Hansen's allegedly "clearly established” rights.
See Dartland,
. For example, during cross examination at the deposition, Hansen was asked a question about Officer Singеr, and he launched into the following tirade:
Q: Did you work with Officer Singer?
A: Yes, he was on my squad. And he does a great job. ... And, you know, like I did his evaluation about a couple of weeks ago and shit like what are you doing, and this evaluation is kind of high, isn’t it.
Q: Who said that?
A: Rick Weir.
Q: Isn’t he the Jewish guy?
A: No. I’ve got to hear shit like isn’t this evaluation kind of high.
And certain people because of this I felt I've got to hear shit like what are you doing giving such a high evaluation which is a bunch of crap. And I don't have to listen to that.
. None of Hansen's citations of authority show that defendants violated clearly established law.
Broderick v. Roache,
