Pоlice officers of the City of Grass Valley, California, arrested plaintiff-appellant Matthew Fogel and impounded his van because of messages painted on the back of the vehicle. Fogel brought suit against Grass Valley and six police officers under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging a violation of his First Amendment rights. The district court assumed without deciding that Fo-gel’s First Amendment rights had been violated. On that assumption, it granted summary judgment for defendants, holding that the City of Grass Valley had not implemented an unconstitutional policy or custom, and that the police officers were entitled to qualified immunity. We hold rather than assume that Fogel’s First Amendment rights were violated. We nevertheless affirm, for the reasons given by the district court.
I. Background
On May 25, 2004, Sergeant Michael Hooker of the Grass Valley Police Department received an anonymous phone call about a parked white Volkswagen van. The caller reported that messages written on the van frightened her. Sergeant Hooker located the unattended 1970 van in the lot of an apartment complex. The words “I AM A FUCKING SUICIDE BOMBER COMMUNIST TERRORIST!” were painted in block letters on the back of the van above the rear window. On the rear window was painted “PULL ME OVER! PLEASE, I DARE YA[.]” Below the window in slightly smaller letters was the text “ALLAH PRAISE THE PATRIOT ACT ... FUCKING JIHAD ON THE FIRST AMENDMENT! P.S. W.O.M.D. ON BOARD!” A small American flag was attached to the van below the lettering. The rest of the van was decorated with slogans and paintings that had no political or threatening character.
Sergeant Hooker was able to determine that the van belonged to Matthew Fogel, a 22-year-old resident of Nevada City, a town four miles away from Grass Valley. Hooker cоncluded that the messages on the van were just “political satire” and returned to the police station after taking digital photographs of the van. Hooker then called his superior, Defendant Captain Jarod Johnson, who was on back-up on-call duty. Hooker read Johnson the words on the van. Johnson disagreed with Hooker’s characterization of the writing as mere satire. Johnson was “quite certain that a criminal act had been committed” and that the van needed to be removed from its locatiоn at the apartment lot.
Captain Johnson ordered Sergeant Hooker to “handle this as a bomb threat,” citing the high terror alert in the country. Now, based on Johnson’s instruction, Hooker “determined that in fact this was not protected speech, but was criminal.” Hooker assigned the criminal investigation to Defendant Officer Jason Perry, who contacted the Department of Homeland Security (“DHS”) and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”). Perry soon learned that Fogel had no criminal history.
Sergeant Hooker returned to the van, joined by Officer Perry and defendant Officers Wesley Collins, Gary McClaughry, and Greg McKenzie. Hooker and Perry found Fogel fairly easily in an apartment in the complex with friends. Hooker and Perry asked Fogel about the van, and Fogel said that he had painted the messages earlier that day. Hooker, Perry and Fogel then walked out to the parking lot.
Officer Perry asked Fogel to explain the messages on the back of the van. There is some dispute about Fogel’s response. The officers contend that Fogеl stated he wanted to “scare people,” and then stated that *828 he wanted to “scare people into thinking.” The officers contend further that Fogel said that he wanted to “terrorize the people of Nevada County like the Iraqi people are being terrorized by the U.S. military.” Fogel denies making these statements. Despite these purported statements, Sergeant Hooker found Fogel to be “mild mannered,” and Officer McKenzie stated in his deposition that he “personally didn’t take [the writing] as a threаt” and “[t]he context was not threatening” to him.
Fogel assured the officers that there was no bomb and he encouraged them to search the van. The search revealed no bomb, or indeed anything illegal, in the van. Although Captain Johnson had directed Sergeant Hooker to treat the situation as a bomb threat, the officers did not follow the Grass Valley Police Department’s standard bomb threat procedures at the scene or during their search of the van.
While they were in the parking lot with Fogel, Officer Perry received word from DHS that the agency was “familiar with Fogel ... as being a local anti government type of person” who was considered a “local nut.” Perry then arrested Fogel for violation of California Penal Code § 422 for “willfully threaten[ing] to commit a crime which will result in death or great bodily injury to another person”; § 148.1 for a “false report of secretion of explosive or facsimile bomb”; and § 415 for the “use[ ] of offensive words in a public place which are inherently likely to provoke an immediate violent rеaction.”
Sergeant Hooker called a private towing company to impound the van. He instructed the company not to release the van until Fogel removed or painted over the writing. Fogel was told he would have to remove or paint over the entire message in order to retrieve his vehicle from the impound lot. No one informed the towing company that a bomb might be inside because, according to Hooker, “at that point we did not believe there was one.” Fogel was held in the Grass Valley jail overnight. The local District Attorney declined to press charges, and Fogel was released from jail the following morning. Fogel recovered his van later that day after painting over the messages with white paint.
Fogel filed a § 1983 suit for damages against the Grass Valley Police Department and officers Johnson, Hooker, Perry, Collins, MeClaughry, and McKenzie in their individual capacities. He challenged his arrest and the seizure of his van, contending that his First, Fourth, and Fourteenth Amendment rights had been violated. He also brought stаte-law claims for false arrest, assault, and battery.
After discovery, defendants moved for summary judgment, and Fogel cross-moved for partial summary judgment. The district court granted summary judgment to all of the defendants.
Fogel v. Grass Valley Police Dep’t,
II. Standard of Review
We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo. We draw all legitimate factual inferences in favor of Fogel, the nonmoving party.
Inouye v. Kemna,
III. Individual Officers
We first address Fogel’s claim against the individual police officers. The district court determined that qualified immunity shielded the officers’ actiоns because reasonable officers could have believed the language was not protected by the First Amendment.
Fogel,
A two-step analysis guides our qualified immunity inquiry. We first ask whether “[tjaken in the light most favorable to the party asserting the injury ... the facts alleged show the officer’s conduct violated a constitutional right.”
Saucier v. Katz,
A. First Amendment Violation
The district court assumed without deciding that the individual officers violated Fogel’s First Amendment rights. We reach that question and hold that the officers did violate his First Amendment rights. Deciding whether political speech is protected political hyperbole or an unprotected true threat can be an issue for a jury, particularly in cases of сriminal prosecution.
Melugin v. Hames,
It is well-established that the First Amendment protects speech that others might find offensive or even frightening. Speech “may indeed best serve its high purpose when it induces a condition of unrest, creates dissatisfaction with the conditions as they are, or even stirs people to anger. Speech is often provocative and challenging.”
Terminiello v. City of Chicago,
“The protections afforded by the First Amendment, however, are not absolute.”
Virginia v. Black,
In most cases where courts have found that speech constituted a true threat, the threatening speech was targeted against specific individuals or was communicated directly to the subject of the threat.
See, e.g., United States v. Dinwiddie,
By contrast, speech that can reasonably be characterized as political rhetoric or hyperbole, particularly such speech not directed at specific individuals, is protected. In
Clairbome Hardware,
the Supreme Court held that the statement “If we catch any of you going in any of them racist stores, we’re gonna break your damn neck” was protected by the First Amendment.
To the extent there was any intimidating overtone, [the] rhetoric was extemporaneous, surrounded by statements supporting non-violent action, and primarily of the social ostracism sort. No specific individuals were targeted. For all that appears, “the break your neck” comments were hyperbolic vernacular. Certainly there was no history that [anyone] associated with the NAACP had broken anyone’s neck who did not participate in, or opposed, [the cause].
Even ostensibly threatening statements directed at specific individuals can be protected. For example, we held in
Bauer v. Sampson
that a college professor’s statement that “I, for one, have etched the name ... and others of her ilk on my permanent shit list, a two-ton slate of polished granite which I hope to someday drop in [the new college president’s] head” was protected speеch.
This circuit has thus far avoided deciding whether to use an objective or subjective standard in determining whether there has been a “true threat.” An objective standard asks whether it is “reasonably foreseeable ... to a speaker that the listener will seriously take his communication as an intent to inflict bodily harm. This suffices to distinguish a ‘true threat’ from speech that is merely frightening.”
Planned Parenthood,
This line of cases and the objective standard were called into question by the Supreme Court’s statement in
Black
that “ ‘[t]rue threats’ encompass those statements whеre the speaker means to communicate a serious expression of an intent to commit an act of unlawful violence to a particular individual or group of individuals,”
We have since analyzed speech under both an objective and a subjective standard. In
United States v. Stewart,
We examine thе totality of the message on Fogel’s van in light of the full context available to someone observing the van.
See Planned Parenthood,
When we take into account the entirе context of Fogel’s statements on the van, it is hard to see how any reasonable observer would have believed the statements were serious expressions of an intent to cause harm. Captain Johnson interpreted the statements on the van as a bomb threat, but when he instructed Sergeant Hooker to treat it in that manner, he was relying on only a telephone description. That is, Johnson failed to see the speech in the context of the van’s full appearance, and the “textual context” of how the speech was communicated is key.
See Bellrichard,
The actions of the officers who actually saw the van and its message make clear that reasonable people would not have understood—and did not understand—the speech as a true threat. After first viewing the van, Sergeant Hooker interpreted the message as satire until Captain Johnson instructed him to treat it as a crime. The officers at the scene did not follow bomb threat procedures, indicating that they saw no reason to take the messаge seriously. It makes no difference that the speech, taken literally, may have communicated a threat.
See Watts,
Applying the subjective standard, we hold that Fogel did not intend his statements to threaten serious harm to anyone. In his deposition, he explained that his goal was:
to express' disagreement ... with the Patriot Act, and I wanted to display the need to express yourself and use your rights, especially when something like the Patriot Act is working to directly take those rights away and let people know that you still want those rights by exercising them. I wanted to express frustration ... and I figured this was a safe, healthy way to do that.
Fogel also explained how he envisioned others would interpret the van:
It seemed to me impossible to construe ... that someone was actually an Islamic extremist with any reason or desire to do harm to anyone. It seemed pretty plain tо me that it’s a joke and it’s ironic and it’s backwards, and that’s just to get people to think about how backwards some of our government’s reasoning is.
There is virtually no evidence that Fogel subjectively intended the speech as a true threat of serious harm.
See Cassel,
We conclude that Fogel’s message constituted, at most, somewhat hyperbolic rhetoric on a matter of public concern. The message was not directed toward any particular person and was communicated as a protest against government policy. *833 Fogel wanted to use his First Amendment rights to protest against what he saw as an attack on those very rights.
We therefore conclude that the message communicated on Fogel’s van was protected by the First Amendment, and that the police officers of Grass Valley violated Fo-gel’s First Amendment rights by arresting him, impounding the van, and requiring him to paint over the message before allowing him to retrieve the van.
B. Clearly Established
We next address whether the law, as applied to the facts of this case, was clearly established with sufficient clarity at the time of the incident to permit an award of damages against the individual officers. We agree with the district court that it was not.
Our inquiry focuses on the precise circumstances of a particular case as well as the state of the law at the time of the alleged violation.
Inouye,
Although we have concluded that the officers violated the First Amendment when they arrested Fogel, impounded his van, and forced him to remove his messаge, we cannot say that existing precedents would have alerted the police officers that we would find a violation.
See Galvin v. Hay,
As the district court pointed out, in no ease had a court held on identical or closely comparable facts that the speech was protected by the First Amendment. That is, in May 2004, when the officers acted, there was no reported case in which a person in the post-September 11 environment satirically proclaimed himself or herself to be a terrorist in possession оf weapons of mass destruction. We do not, by our invocation of September 11, 2001, suggest that the First Amendment provides less protection than before September 11. Rather, we recognize that what might previously have been understood as relatively harmless talk might, in the immediate aftermath of September 11, have been understood to constitute a real threat.
*834
Fogel cites
Watts
as a case that should have put the officers on notice that they were infringing his First Amendment rights. In
Watts,
the protester’s “threat” against President Johnson was uttered at a large political rally and was conditional.
Watts,
But in this case, at least a portion of Fogel’s audience reacted very differently. The caller who alerted the police to the presence of Fogel’s van in the parking lot was clearly worried by the language on the van and by the threat that it or its owner might pose. Further, there is evidence that Captain Johnson, and eventually Sergeant Hooker, felt that the van (and its owner) were making a true threat. Sergeant Hooker described his belief that Fo-gel could be “unstable,” and Officer Perry relayed to the other officers the information that the DHS thought that Fogel was a “local nut.” The test for qualified immunity is whether
any
reasonable officer would make the constitutional error in question, not whether
a
reasonable person would. We cannot conclude that at the time of the incident, аll reasonable officers would have concluded that Fogel’s speech was protected by the First Amendment.
See Malley,
We therefore hold that despite their violation of Fogel’s First Amendment rights, qualified immunity protеcts the individual officers from an award of damages.
TV. Municipal Liability
Fogel also challenges the district court’s ruling that the Grass Valley Police Department was entitled to summary judgment.
See Fogel,
A municipality cannot be hеld liable under a respondeat superior theory.
Monell,
Fogel has provided no evidence that Grass Valley maintained an official policy of suppressing political speech protected by the First Amendment or that any final policymaking official made a decision to violate his rights. Fogel also has not established that any of the officers involved with his arrest werе official policymakers with final decision making authority for Grass Valley, or that any official policymaker “either delegated that authority to, or ratified the decision of, a subordinate.”
See Ulrich v. City & County of San Francisco,
V. Conclusion
We hold that the individual defendants in this case violated Fogel’s First Amendment rights by arresting him, impounding his van, and making him paint over his message. We affirm the district court’s decision that qualified immunity protects these defendants from a claim for damages. We also affirm the district court’s decision that the City of Grass Valley did not violate Fogel’s First Amendment rights.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. We consider only Fogel's First Amendment claim on appeal. Fogel abandoned any arguments relating to his Fourth Amendment and state-law claims by failing to argue them in his brief.
See Ghahremani v. Gonzales,
