Ellen Storck appeals from the district court’s entry of summary judgment based on its finding that Officer Joseph McHugh of the Coral Springs Police Department (“CSPD”) was entitled to qualified immunity in this § 1983 civil rights action. She claimed that Officer McHugh violated her rights under the Fourth Amendment when he falsely arrested her for obstructing justice. On appeal, Storck argues that McHugh did not have actual or arguable probable cause to arrest her and accordingly was not entitled to qualified immunity-
Upon thorough review of the record, we conclude that Officer McHugh had arguable probable cause to arrest Storck for interfering with and obstructing his execution of legal process — a Broward County Circuit Court-ordered custody decree directing the police to take Storck’s son into custody immediately and turn him over to the Suffolk County Department of Social Services (“Suffolk DSS”). On this record, Officer McHugh was entitled to qualified immunity, and accordingly we affirm.
I.
We review
de novo
a district court’s disposition of a summary judgment motion based on qualified immunity, applying the same legal standards as the district court.
See Lee v. Ferraro,
The sad facts surrounding this child-custody case began on August 1, 1992, when the Suffolk DSS took Aaron Storck (“Aaron”), the youngest of Plaintiff Storck’s four children, into protective custody after a New York hospital, which had been treating Aaron, contacted the Suffolk DSS about possible child abuse. The Suffolk DSS subsequently commenced an action in New York Family Court against Storck, alleging neglect and seeking the removal of all four of her children.
On March 24,1993, after a full evidentia-ry hearing, the New York Family Court found that Storck suffered from Munchau-sen Syndromе by Proxy, a psychological disorder in which a person fabricates symptoms of illness in her child for the purpose of gaining the attention of medical personnel. Based on this finding, the New York Family Court entered an Order removing Aaron from his mother’s custody and placing him with a foster family in *1310 Suffolk County (“New York Family Court Order”). At Storck’s request, Aaron was later sent to live with relatives in Ohio.
In November 1996, Ohio Social Services alerted the Suffolk DSS that the New York Family Court Order, which had been modified to direct that Aaron stay with relatives in Ohio, was about to expire. Indeed, the order did expire on December 31, 1996. In early January 1997, Suffolk DSS moved to extend the already-expired order. At that point, however, Storck had already moved to Ohio and reunited with Aaron. On February 4, 1997, the New York Family Court entered an Order extending Aaron’s placement with the Ohio relatives, and on March 20, 1997, it ordered that Storck was to have no contact with Aaron for another year (collectively, “New York Family Court Order II”).
The following month, Storck moved with Aaron and her other three children to Coral Springs, Florida. At that time, Storck was not aware of New York Family Court Order II, which extended Aaron’s placement with the Ohio relatives and prohibited her from contacting Aaron: ■ After moving to Florida, on May 20,1997, Storck filed, in the United States. District Court for the Eastern District of New York, a § 1983 civil rights action against Suffolk County, Suffolk County DSS, and various doctors, lawyers, and caseworkers who had helped take Aaron away in 1992. 1
On June 10, 1997, the New York Family Court ordered Aaron removed to the custody of the Florida Department of Children and Family Services (“Florida DCFS”), and on June 17, 1997, it demanded that Storck appear before it to explain her alleged violation of New York Family Court Order II (collectively, “June Removal Order”). Thereafter, two Florida DCFS caseworkers and two CSPD officers came to Storck’s Coral Springs residence armed with a faxed copy of the June Removal Order. While Storck was talking to the police, Aaron, who has all along maintained his mother’s innocence, snuck out of a back window in the apartment and hid at a neighbor’s house. As the officers sat in her living room, Storck cоnsulted with Aaron’s attorneys on the telephone and discovered that the June Removal Order was not properly domesticated in Florida and therefore was unenforceable. During this meeting, Storck advised the CSPD officers that she would not give Aaron to them and declined to let the officers look at Aaron, who Storck represented was asleep. In her deposition, she denied that she told Aaron to sneak out of the house if the police came. Before leaving, the officers specifically advised Storck that they would come back for Aaron and could arrest her if she interfered at that later date. Thus, after this incident, Storck was aware that (1) the CSPD would return with an order cоncerning Aaron’s custody, and (2) the CSPD could arrest her if she interfered with the execution of that order.
Storck then filed an emergency motion in Broward County Circuit Court for a temporary injunction to bar the Florida *1311 DCFS from domesticating, enforcing, or executing the June Removal Order. The Broward County Circuit Court granted temporary injunctive relief on June 20, 1997. A few months later, on August 25, 1997, the New York Family Court entered still another order excusing Storck for having failed to comply with its Order II, having found that there was no evidence that she was given notice of it. But the New York Family Court again unambiguously ordered that Aaron be handed over to Suffolk DSS (“August Removal Order”). Suffolk DSS lodged a verified petition in Broward County Circuit Court to domesticate and enforce the August Removal Order.
On January 9, 1998, the Broward County Circuit Court issued an “Order on Verified Counter Petition to Recognize and Enforce Out-of-State Custody Decree” (“Broward County Circuit Court Order”), which provided, in pertinent part:
This cause having been heard ex-parte, and a verified Petition to recognize and enforce an out of state custody decree from New York, for the return of the minor child Aaron Storck having been filed in this case, alleging facts sufficient to authorize taking into custody the child, upon review of the pleading and being otherwise advised in the premises, THEREFORE, the Sheriff of Broward County and all Sheriffs of the State of Florida are HEREBY ORDERED AND DIRECTED TO FORTHWITH take into custody [Aaron] from anyone who has possession and immеdiately turn him over to [Suffolk DSS] or the Florida [DCFS] for temporary custodial assistance. The Sheriff is authorized and directed to serve and enforce this Order in the daytime or in the nighttime, and if necessary to break the door where the minor child is believed to be residing or being kept. The Sheriff shall not delay the execution of this Order for any reason or permit the situation to rise where [Storck] is allowed to remove the child from the jurisdiction of this Court.
Should the Respondent, Ellen Storck, or any other person, in any way violate the mandates of this Order in the presence of the Law Enforcement Officer, said Officer is to immediately arrest and incarcerate the offending party until such time [as] the attending party may be brought before this Honorable Court for further proceedings as this Court may deem just and proper under the circumstances.
Should [Storck] REFUSE TO RELEASE THE LOCATION OF THE MINOR CHILD [Storck] SHALL BE ARRESTED AND TAKEN BEFORE THE ISSUING JUDGE.
(capitalization and emphasis in original). The subsequent execution of the Broward County Circuit Court Order at Storck’s Coral Springs home, which resulted in Storck’s arrest, forms the factual basis for this § 1983 action.
That same day, pursuant to the Broward County Circuit Court Order, officers from the Broward Sheriffs Office (“BSO”) and the CSPD surrounded Storck’s residence for the purpose of taking Aaron into custody. A number of CSPD officers, including Officers Caffray, Randolph, and McHugh, were dispatched to assist in the enforcement of the custody decree pursuant to a material assistance agreement between the BSO and CSPD. By Storck’s account, she noticed police officers in her apartment complex around 3:00 p.m., but thought that they might be there investigating another tenant. However, she conceded she was fully aware that Suffolk DSS was attempting to obtain a court order to retake possession of Aaron. As Storck put it, “It was not a surprise that they [Suffolk DSS] would not give up and go away.” Indeed, Storck had received a phone call from her *1312 attorney that very morning and was advised that Suffolk DSS was trying to retake custody of Aaron. At some point after observing the police officers in her parking lot, Storck, accompanied by Aaron, left her apartment briefly to go to a neighbor’s house. Uрon spotting the police presence in her parking lot, Storck hastily retreated back into her apartment with Aaron. 2
At about 4:30 or 4:45 p.m., Storck heard a female officer, later identified as Officer Caffray, an experienced hostage negotiator, speak to her through a bullhorn and say, “Ellen, answer the phone now.” According to Storck, when she heard the bullhorn, she was on a conference call with Patrick Gonya and Amy Hickman, who are Aaron’s attorneys. Storck does not dispute that she had call-waiting and it is clear from the record that at that point she must have known the police were there for Aaron, based not only on the morning phone call from the attorneys but аlso on her conduct when she left the apartment briefly, spotted the police, and hurried back inside. It is also undisputed that the BSO and CSPD officers had been trying to call Storck for no less than 15-30 minutes, but that Storck did not answer until after 'she was directed to do so on the bullhorn. As she noted in her deposition, when she heard the bull horn, she was “at that point concerned because these police had been out there for such a long period of time.... ”
When she heard the bullhorn, she clicked over to the other line and spoke to Officer Caffray. According to Storck, Officer Caffray told her that the police were there to serve her with papers concerning a court hearing the following weеk, but denied that she had a “pick-up” order for Aaron. At least three times, Storck asked Caffray what the hearing was about, and ' the officer said that she did not know. Storck continued to ask Caffray for still more information and clicked back and forth on the telephone line between her call with Caffray and her conference call with attorneys Gonya and Hickman for no less than 30-45 minutes and possibly longer. In total, according to Storck’s deposition, she clicked back and forth between Caffray and the attorneys between eight and ten times. During this time, according to Storck, “we were waiting for her [Caffray] to tell us or to tell me [what the hearing was about]” and the attorneys “were trying to through their own sourcеs find out what was going on.” At one point, Storck told Caffray “to just leave the papers” and advised Caffray, “I will be at your hearing on Thursday.” When Caf-fray told Storck she could not “just leave the papers,” but had to serve Storck with them, Storck still refused to cooperate.
After this 30- to 45-minute period of clicking back and forth on the phone asking for more details about the order and the hearing on Thursday, Storck finally exited her apartment and, according to her deposition, was knocked to the ground by BSO and CSPD officers and arrested for obstruction of justice. Officer McHugh was responsible for handcuffing Storck.
Almost four years later, on December 26, 2001, Storck filed this lawsuit against the City of Coral Springs, and Officers Caffray, McHugh, and Randolph (an officer who helped maintain a perimeter behind the residence). She brought § 1983 civil rights claims against the officers in their individual capacities based on alleged violations of her Fourth and Fourteenth *1313 Amendment rights to be free from false arrest and unreasonable seizure. She also asserted, pursuant to state law, a false-arrest claim against the City of Coral Springs. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the City of Coral Springs because Storck failed to give timely notice to the City as required by Fla. Stat. § 768.28(6), and in favor of Officers Randolph and Caffray, after Storck conceded that she had no good-faith § 1983 claims against them. 3
The district court granted summary judgment in favor of Officer MсHugh on the basis of qualified immunity. The district court found, among other things, that McHugh reasonably could have believed that Storck was committing or was attempting to commit a violation of Fla. Stat. § 843.02 (providing that “[wjhoever shall resist, obstruct, or oppose any officer ... in the lawful execution of any legal duty ... shall be guilty of a misdemeanor of the first degree”), and that McHugh, at the very least, had arguable probable cause to arrest Storck for violating that statute. Thus, the district court determined that McHugh was entitled to qualified immunity:
The Court finds, based upon the totality of the circumstances and the collective knowledge of the officers assembled at her residence, that Officer McHugh enjoys qualified immunity as to Ms. Storck’s claim of false arrest. Even after considering the facts in the light most favorable to Ms. Storck, the Court finds that Ms. Storck’s undisputed lack of cooperation with the officers is sufficient to satisfy the minimal standard of arguable probable cause. In short, Ms. Storck failed to carry her burden of demonstrating that no reasonable officer could have found probable cause under the totality of the circumstances.
This appeal followed.
II.
On appeal, Storck argues essentially that significant factual disputes exist on the issue of whether Officer McHugh had arguable probable cause, thus preventing the district court from granting summary judgment based on qualified immunity. Storck urges that arguable probable cause did not exist to arrest her for a violation of § 843.02 because she never saw the Bro-ward County Circuit Court Order directing the police to take Aaron into custody and because the arresting officers concealed the true nature of the Broward County Circuit Court Order from her prior to her arrest. 4
Qualified immunity provides protection for government officials performing discretionary functions and sued in their individual capacities as long as their conduct violates no “clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.”
Lassiter v. Ala. A & M Univ., Bd. of Trustees,
Qualified immunity offers “complete protection for government officials sued in their individual capacities as long as ‘their conduct violates no cleаrly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.’ ” Thomas v. Roberts,261 F.3d 1160 , 1170 (11th Cir.2001) (quoting Har *1314 low v. Fitzgerald,457 U.S. 800 , 818,102 S.Ct. 2727 , 2738,73 L.Ed.2d 396 (1982)) (additional quotations omitted). The purpose of this immunity is to allow government officials to carry out their discretionary duties without the fear of personal liability or harassing litigation, see Anderson v. Creighton,483 U.S. 635 , 638,107 S.Ct. 3034 , 3038,97 L.Ed.2d 523 (1987), protecting from suit “all but the plainly incompetent or one who is knowingly violating the federal law.” Willingham v. Loughnan,261 F.3d 1178 , 1187 (11th Cir.2001). Because qualified immunity is a defense not only from liability, but also from suit, it is “important for a court to ascertain the validity of a qualified immunity defense as early in the lawsuit as possible.” GJR Invs., Inc. v. County of Escambia,132 F.3d 1359 , 1370 (11th Cir.1998) (citation omitted).
Under qualified immunity analysis, the public offiсial must first prove that he was acting within the scope of his discretionary authority when the allegedly unconstitutional acts took place.
See Courson v. McMillian,
Once the public official has established that he was acting within the scope of his discretionary authority, the burden shifts to the plaintiff to establish that qualified immunity does not apply.
See Lee v. Ferraro,
Here, Storck argues that McHugh violated her Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment rights by arresting her without probable cause. “Plainly, an arrest without probable cause violates thе right to be free from an unreasonable search under the Fourth Amendment.”
Durruthy v. Pastor,
Moreover, officers “are entitled to qualified immunity if therе was [even]
arguable
probable cause for the arrest.”
Jones v. Cannon,
Section 843.02 provides, in pertinent part: “Whoever shall resist, obstruct, or oppose any officer ... in the execution of legal process or in the lawful execution of any legal duty, without offering or doing violence to the person of the officer, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor....” Fla. Stat. § 843.02. To support a conviction under § 843.02, the state must show: (1) the officer was engaged in the lawful execution of a legal duty; and (2) the action by the defendant constituted obstruction or resistance of that lawful duty.
See H.A.P. v. State,
On the question of whether an officer was performing a legal duty for purposes of a conviction under § 843.02, “ ‘it is important to distinguish between a police officer in the lawful execution of any legal duty and a police officer who is merely on the job.’ ”
Jay,
It is equally plain that an officer in McHugh’s place reasonably could have perceived Storck’s conduct as amounting to obstruction of or resistance to the execution of a lawful duty, or at least an attempt to do so, within the meaning of § 843.02. It was undisputed that, upon the officers’ arrival at Storck’s apartment complex, the officers waited for no less than two hours to carry out the custody decree, despite the plain language of the Broward County Circuit Court Order, which provided that all sheriffs of the *1316 State of Florida were charged with authority to take possession of Aaron immediately. Again, the Order authorized the police to (1) “serve and enforce this Order in the daytime or in the nighttime, and if necessary to break the door where the minor is believed to be rеsiding or being kept”; (2) “immediately arrest and incarcerate” any person who “in any way violate[s] the mandates of this Order in the presence of the Law Enforcement Officer”; and (3) incarcerate the offending party “until such time [as] the attending party may be brought before this Honorable Court for further proceedings as this Court may deem just and proper under the circumstances.”
Despite the Circuit Court’s unambiguous grant of authority to take immediate action, it is not disputed that upon arrival at Storek’s apartment complex, the team of officers of which McHugh was a member waited for over two hours to execute the court order. During this extended time frame, Storck exited and hurriedly reentered her house upon seeing the police. She refused to answer the telephone for about 30 minutes when the police called her, despite the fact that she quite apparently knew the police were at the complex on account of Aaron and were trying to contact her on the phone to that end. Storck even admitted in her deposition that when she heard the bullhorn announcement, she was “at that point concerned because these police had been out there for such a■ long period of time.... ”
After finally answering Caffray’s call and being told that the police were there to serve her with papers concerning a hearing the following week, Storck proceeded to debate the validity and contents of the Order and demanded details about it from Caffray before she would accept process. At least three times, Storck asked Caffray what the hearing was about, and the officer said that she did not know. During her phone call with Officer Caffray, Storck clicked back and forth to discuss the Order and what Caffray was telling her with the attorneys no less than eight times and for not less than thirty minutes. Indeed, as we have noted, at one point during the stand-off Storck told Officer Caffray to just leave the papers, advising the officer that she would be at Thursday’s hearing. After this prolonged period of clicking back and forth on the phone and asking for more details about the Order and the hearing on Thursday, Storck finally exited her apartment. We add that, in the past, officers from the same police department had attempted to take custody of Aaron, pursuant to a court order — albeit, an undomesticated order — and, during their conversation with Storck, Aaron snuek out of the back window of the apartment.
In
Post v. City of Fort Lauderdale,
the plaintiffs, a restaurant owner and the manager of the restaurant, brought a § 1983 civil rights action against,
inter alia,
a police officer for false arrest in connection with the officer’s assistance with a Fort Lauderdale City Code team’s inspection of the restaurant premises.
See
Thus, viewing the facts in the light most favorable to Storck, she has not established a constitutional violation because, at the very least, McHugh had arguable probable cause to believe that Storck was “opposing] or ... obstructing] a law officer in the execution of the officer’s duty, [or] attempting] to oppose or to obstruct the officer.”
Post,
Moreover, even if Storck had presented sufficient facts to allege a violation of a cоnstitutional right — and on this record Storck has failed to do so — here such a right was not clearly established. A party may show that the law was clearly established by (1) pointing to “ ‘a materially similar case [that has] already decided that what the police officer was doing was unlawful,’ ”
Lee v. Ferraro,
Storck does not provide, and our own independent research has not revealed, any case law to support the notion that an officer armed with a valid state circuit court order of the type involved in this case must provide notice to a non-cooperative third-party before executing the order. Indeed, the Broward County Circuit Court Order is based on Florida Rule of Family Law Procedure Form 12.941(e), “Order to Pick-Up Minor Children).” Contrary to Storck’s argument that she was entitled to notice, Form 12.941(e) expressly provides that the order is “issued without prior notice to the non-movant” and is meant to inform “all parties involved in this matter ... that they are scheduled to appear and testify at a hearing regarding this matter” on a set date. See Fla. R. Fam. L.P. Form 12.941(e) (emphasis added).
As provided in Rule 12.941(e), the Bro-ward County Circuit Court Order indicated that it was entered “ex-parte” and exрressly set a hearing on the matter: “[T]his matter shall be set for hearing on January 15, 1998, at 10:45 a.m. at the Broward County Judicial Center.” Accordingly, we are unpersuaded by Storck’s argument about her right to know in advance what was in the Order that the BSO and CSPD officers were trying to serve on her. We also note the Order specifically directed that Suffolk DSS could not remove Aaron from the jurisdiction “until further order of this court.”
Cf. Ain v. Ain,
Moreover, since the Fourth Amendment normally requires little more notice than a knock on the door prior to a forced entry pursuant to a lawfully issued warrant, we hardly could conclude on this record that Storck did not receive any requisite notice to which she otherwise may have been entitled under controlling caselaw.
See Wilson v. Arkansas,
Finally, we are unpersuaded by Storck’s suggestion that misleading her about the nature of the Broward County Circuit Court Order or that the use of such a ruse under the circumstances otherwise converts what would be reasonable into something constitutionally unreasonable. The use of subterfuge in law enforcement activities has long been recognized by the Supreme Court. For example, in the context of undercover operations, the Court has stated that “the Government is entitled to use decoys and to conceal the identity of its agents. The various protections of the Bill of Rights, of course, provide checks upon such official deception for the protection of the individual.”
Lewis v. United States,
Thus, just as officers armed with a valid search warrant may engage in a ruse to gain entry into a private home, here, the CSPD officers who plainly had a valid court custody order and the concomitant power to execute the order at any time committed no violation of a clearly established constitutional right under these circumstances.
7
See also Frazier v. Cupp,
Here, pursuant to clearly established law, Storck was
not
entitled to the “flow of information” that she demanded and without which, she now claims her constitutional rights were violated.
Cf. Moran v. Burbine,
Moreover, Storck has not established, alternatively, that this case is one of “obvious clarity.”
See Vinyard v. Wilson,
In short, we are satisfied that Storck failed to establish a constitutional violation, and that even if she did, she has not shown that it was “clearly established,” within the mеaning of qualified immunity analysis. Accordingly, we affirm the final judgment of the district court.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. On July 26, 2002, the district court dismissed all of these claims based on the Rootc
er-Feldman
doctrine.
See District of Columbia Court of Appeals v. Feldman,
. It is not clear from the record exactly when Storck exited аnd reentered her' home. According to the CSPD "After Action Report," the CSPD officers on the scene had been advised that Storck "had made threats that she would not let anyone take her son even if it meant killing herself and/or her son." Storck denies making any threats.
. The summary judgment orders in favor of Coral Springs, Randolph, and Caffray are not at issue in this appeal.
. Since we find that arguable probable cause existed, we need not and do not address Storck's arguments going to actual probable cause.
. The analysis of arguable probable cause is not concerned with what
Storck
thought or knew, but rather, what a reasonable officer knowing what Officer McHugh knew could have thought.
See Durruthy v. Pastor,
. This case does not present the other kind of “obvious clarity” case where a “broad statement!] of principle in caselaw [that is] not tied to particularized facts ... can clearly establish law applicable in the future to different sets of detailed facts.”
Vinyard v. Wilson,
. The validity of the Broward County Circuit Court Order has not been challenged.
