Elder suffered a severe beating at the hands of his jailers and sued for damages under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, naming Gerald W. Brown, a Georgia prosecutor, among other law-enforcement defendants. Elder alleged that Brown conspired to maliciously prosecute Elder for obstruction of justice in an effort to cover up Elder’s beating. Brown *695 moved to dismiss on the basis of prosecutorial immunity. The district court denied the motion and Brown appeals.
We have jurisdiction of an appeal of an interlocutory order denying a motion to dismiss based on immunity from suit.
Nixon v. Fitzgerald,
A prosecutor’s decision to bring charges against a person, so long as the prosecutor is acting within the scope and territorial jurisdiction of his office, is immune from an action for damages under § 1983.
Imbler v. Pachtman,
In
Dykes v. Hosemann,
The district court ruled that Brown’s alleged misconduct took place prior to the judicial phase of the criminal process, assuming for the purposes of the motion that the prosecutor, in fact, conspired with the jailers to cover up their conduct by filing a diversionary prosecution against this plaintiff. The district court therefore concluded that only qualified immunity shields Brown in this action; and because the complaint alleges malicious conduct, qualified immunity offers no protection.
The district court’s order does not tell us what Brown did in furtherance of this conspiracy other than to charge Elder improperly. ER Tab 5, p. 4. Elder’s brief argues that Brown participated in the conspiracy by refusing Elder’s request to investigate the alleged beating. Assuming for the purposes of the motion that Brown did fail to investigate Elder’s written complaint of a beating, that fact would not strip Brown of prosecuto-rial immunity in Elder’s action for damages flowing from Brown’s decision to initiate Elder’s prosecution.
If prosecutorial immunity means anything, it means that prosecutors who take on the thankless task of public prosecution may prosecute, ably or poorly, as the case may be, answerable to the voters, and to disciplinary officers of the courts and of the bar; but not answerable to every person wrongfully prosecuted who can find a lawyer willing to allege that the prosecutor filed charges in bad faith, or for evil motives, or as a conspirator.
See, e.g. Stump v. Sparkman,
The complaint alleges that “Brown ... attempted to secrete Plaintiffs [sic] injuries from discovery by way of isolation and segregation.” ER, Tab 2, p. 8. Brown’s role in the alleged misconduct of others in the hiding of evidence is not disclosed by the plaintiffs case. Accordingly, we need not reach the question whether a prosecutor would have the protection of immunity if facts were alleged, and proof offered, of prosecutorial hiding of evidence, or other misconduct, while acting outside the scope of his prosecu-torial authority. Because the essence of Elder’s complaint is an alleged cover-up by way of malicious prosecution, and not a cover-up by way of off-duty misconduct outside the scope of his prosecutorial duties, we limit our review to the case made by the pleadings and motion papers. On this record, it was error to deny Gerald W. Brown, prosecuting attorney, the immunity which Imbler v. Pachtman *696 extends to prosecutors as well as to judges. As to Brown, the case should have been dismissed.
REVERSED.
