Six-foot-nine-inch All-American Deon Thomas was the kind of high school basketball prospect who could make college coaches salivate-or worse. The University of Illinois was so eager to see Thomas wearing a Fighting Illini jersey that an assistant coach allegedly offered the high school student $80,000 and a Chevrolet, and promised to move his grandmother into a new apartment, if he would agree to accept the school’s offer of a full scholarship. 1 The charges against Illinois were made public by a Big Ten rival college also interested in Thomas’ talents on the court, the University of Iowa. The National Collegiate Athletic Association (“NCAA”) investigated Iowa’s charges and, though it dismissed the two most serious allegations about a car and cash, found a number of other violations including car loans by boosters and free tickets to NCAA tournaments. As punishment, the NCAA banned Illinois from the 1991 NCAA tournament, limited to two the number of basketball scholarships it could offer in 1991-1992 and 1992-1993, prohibited the school from playing outside the United States in 1991, and severely restricted recruiting. The school’s internal investigation also led to a freeze on coaches’ salaries. 2 Thomas, mean *449 while, sat out his freshman year while the investigation was pending.
Now Thomas, seeking vindication of sorts, is suing Bruce Pearl, the assistant basketball coach at Iowa who first charged Illinois with offering illicit incentives to recruits.
3
According to Thomas, Pearl surreptitiously taped phone conversations he had with Thomas and Thomas’ friends and relatives in violation of the federal wiretapping statute, 18 U.S.C. §§ 2510-2520, and the Illinois Eavesdropping Statute, 720 ILCS 5/14-1 through 5/14-9. Thomas filed a two-count complaint in Champaign County, Illinois. The defendant had it removed to federal court in the Central District of Illinois based on federal question jurisdiction. Because neither the federal nor the state wiretapping statutes apply to Pearl’s conduct, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment in his favor.
In late 1988, Coach Pearl began efforts to recruit Thomas to the University of Iowa. As part of the negotiations, Thomas told Pearl about his dealings with other colleges and universities. According to a memo prepared for his superiors, Pearl learned from Thomas in December 1988 that an Illinois coach had offered to move the recruit’s grandmother to a nicer apartment. “I asked Deon how he felt about the offer and also why he was telling me. He said that at first he was insulted. He prides himself on being honest and religious. However, the idea of helping his grandmother very much appealed to him” (defendant’s supp. app. at 19). Pearl believed correctly that such an offer, if it had been made, violated NCAA regulations. Fred Mims, Associate Athletic Director at Iowa and the NCAA compliance officer on campus, gave Pearl a tape recorder with a telephone attachment and told the .coach to document Thomas’ statements. Between April and July 1989, Pearl made at least ten calls to Thomas or to Thomas’ friends or relatives. During these conversations Thomas discussed the various perks, including cash, which had been offered to him and other recruits by the University of Illinois. According to Pearl’s affidavit, Pearl played the tapes for just two individuals other than his superiors at Iowa: an NCAA enforcement officer, as he was required to do upon request under NCAA rules, and a University of Illinois attorney.
Thomas’ first claim is that Pearl violated the federal law against wiretapping. That statute creates civil and criminal liability for intentionally intercepting or disclosing the contents of any “wire, oral, or electronic communication.” 18 U.S.C. § 2511(l)(a)(c). 4 The district court found that the ban on wiretapping did not apply to Pearl’s actions because of two exceptions in the law. We agree that the coach is not liable under § 2511, but our analysis differs significantly from the' district court’s. The wiretapping law’s first exemption is for “a person acting under color of law * * * where such person is a party to the communication or one of the parties to the communication has given prior consent to such interception.” 18 U.S.C. § 2511(2)(c). The district court found that, *450 as an assistant basketball .coach at a state university, Pearl acted “under color of law” when he taped conversations with Deon Thomas and Thomas’ friends and relatives. We disagree.
Traditionally-that is, before the Supreme Court’s 1961 decision in
Monroe v. Pape,
The phrase “under color of law” in § 1983 actions is now so broad that it means the same thing as “state action.”
Lugar v. Edmondson Oil Co.,
In
Lugar,
for example, the Supreme Court emphasized that it was equating state action and color of law in § 1983 only because to do otherwise “would substantially undercut the congressional purpose in providing the § 1983 cause of action.”
Id.
at 935,
[Although we hold in this case that the under-color-of-state-law requirement does not add anything not already included within the state-action requirement of the Fourteenth Amendment, § 1983 is applicable to other constitutional provisions and statutory provisions that contain no state- *451 action requirement. Where such a federal right is at issue, the statutory concept of action under color of. state law would be a distinct element of the case not satisfied implicitly by a finding of a violation of the particular federal right.
Moreover, the Civil Rights Act of 1871, unlike the wiretapping act, is a remedial statute intended to be as broad as the Fourteenth Amendment.
Id.
at 934,
In the wiretapping setting, conflating color of law and state action would confer on every last employee of federal, state and local government a free pass to record conversations without the second party’s consent. Most eases that arise under the wiretapping act involve law enforcement officers gathering evidence against suspected criminals. The exemption in § 2511 for officials acting under color of law was evidently designed to aid police in ensnaring lawbreakers, not to unleash upon society millions of government workers — armed with recording devices strapped to their phones — seeking to invade the privacy of individuals neither suspected nor accused of committing crimes. Also, if color of law means the same thing in § 2511 that it means in § 1983, police officers who secretly taped conversations without a warrant or the approval of their superiors would be free from criminal and civil liability. That cannot be what Congress intended.
We do not necessarily limit the “under color of law” language in § 2511 to law enforcement officers acting within the scope of their authority. Yet there must be some logical and reasonable connection between the government worker’s job description and eavesdropping. Society simply has no expectation that basketball coaches will wiretap their conversations with high school recruits, no matter the extenuating circumstances. Pearl argues that he acted with the approval of his superiors, but that is beside the point. We do not expect college administrators and athletic directors to wiretap, or sanction wiretaps, any more than basketball coaches. Thus the district court’s conclusion that Pearl acted under color of law cannot stand.
However, a second provision of § 2511 relieves any eavesdropper from liability who does not surreptitiously record conversations “for the purpose of committing any criminal or tortious act in violation of the Constitution or laws of the United States or any State,” where at least’ one party to the conversation consents. 5 This means Thomas must show that Pearl either intended to break the law or commit a tort against him in order to prove a violation of the federal statute. We agree with Judge Baker that Thomas has failed to establish either point, although our analysis again differs slightly from the district court’s.
Thomas does not allege that Pearl has broken any laws other than the wiretapping law itself,' which we presume does not destroy the exemption. Instead, Thomas argues that Pearl robbed him of his privacy and defamed him and should therefore be liable under § 2511. The complaint supports these contentions only in the most vague and haphazard manner. The district court dismissed Thomas’ allegations almost in passing because he did not try to establish the elements of a cause of action in tort. Although
*452
inartful, Thomas’ complaint could be read to state a cause of action for any of three privacy torts: (1) intrusion upon the seclusion of another; (2) publicity given to private life; and (3) publicity placing a person in a false light.
Lovgren v. Citizens First Nat’l Bank,
The tort of intruding upon the seclusion of another is aimed at discomfort caused by the intrusion itself-for example, someone enters your bedroom,
Byfield v. Candler,
Nor is Thomas able to mount a claim that Pearl caused him unwarranted publicity, a second variety of privacy tort recognized in Illinois. To state such a cause of action, the plaintiff must prove that the defendant disclosed a personal matter in a way that would be highly offensive to a reasonable person and which is not a legitimate subject of public concern. Restatement (Second) of Torts § 652D (1977). Even assuming that Pearl’s revelations would be highly offensive to a reasonable person, recruiting abuses by a public university are undoubtedly a matter of public interest. Pearl’s intent was not to embarrass Thomas but to call attention to unfair and illegal practices by a rival university.
Finally, Thomas has failed to prove, or even suggest, how Pearl’s actions put him in a false light. To state this cause of action a plaintiff must show that he was placed in a false light because of defendant’s action, that the publicity would be highly obnoxious to a reasonable person, and that the defendant acted either knowing that the statements were false or with reckless disregard for the truth.
Kolegas v. Heftel Broadcasting Corp.,
Having failed to establish a federal violation, Thomas turns for solace to Illinois. Indeed, its eavesdropping statute at first glance appears broader than the federal law. The Illinois act provides civil penalties for a person who “uses an eavesdropping device to hear or record all or part of any conversation unless he does so with the consent of
all
of the parties to such conversation” (emphasis added). 720 ILCS 5/14-2. In
People v. Beardsley,
[T]he eavesdropping, statute was intended to protect individuals from the surreptitious monitoring of their conversations by the use of eavesdropping devices. * * * The statute is based on the assumption that if the parties to a conversation act under circumstances which entitle them to believe that the conversation is private and cannot be heard by others who are acting in a lawful manner, then they should be protected in their privacy.
Id.
at 53,
Since Thomas has failed to, state a claim under either the federal or Illinois wiretapping laws, the decision of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. "Basketball Team Penalized After Recruiting Inquiry,” N.Y. Times, Nov. 11, 1990 at A 52.
. Mark Asher, "Illinois Basketball Gets Three Years’ Probation; NCAA Cuts Illini Out of NCAA Tournament,” Wash.Post, Nov. 8, 1990 at B3.
. Pearl is now head coach at Southern Indiana in Evansville and Thomas has gone on to become a successful player at Illinois.
. The statute provides in part:
(1) Except as otherwise specifically provided in this chapter any person who—
(a) intentionally intercepts, endeavors to intercept, or procures any other person to intercept or endeavor to intercept, any wire, oral, or electronic communication;
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(c) intentionally discloses, or endeavors -to disclose, to any other person the contents of any wire, oral, or electronic communication, knowing or having reason to know that the information was obtained through the interception of a wire, oral, or electronic communication in violation of this subsection; * * *
shall be punished * * *.
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(2) * * * (c) It shall not be unlawful under this chapter for a person acting under color of law ‘to intercept a wire, oral, or electronic communication, where such person is a party to the communication or one of the parties to the communication has given prior consent to such interception.
(d) It shall not be unlawful under this chapter for a person not acting under color of law to intercept a wire, oral, or electronic communication where such person is a party to the communication or where one of the parties to the communication has given prior consent to such interception unless such communication is intercepted for the purpose of committing any criminal or tortious act in violation of the Constitution or laws of the United States or of any State.
. This sweeping provision drowns the rest of the statute and makes the first exception for persons acting under color of law redundant. As we noted above, one who acts under color of law in this context is by definition not breaking the law or committing a tort and is thus exempt from liability under either clause.
. Pearl might also have a privilege defense to a defamation suit because according to his affidavit the only two people (other than his superiors) for whom he played the tapes of his conversations were a lawyer for the University of Illinois and an NCAA official. It is a defense that the communication was privileged, and both communications compelled by law and communications to a lawyer in anticipation of potential litigation are protected.
Becker v. Philco Corp.,
