MEMORANDUM OPINION
This-is a case where, if the allegations áre true, a petty complaint from a neighbor led to a grossly disproportionate response' by police, culminating in officers entering a family’s home and arresting its owner for doing nothing more than attempting to videotape the officers’ overreaction on her own property. It is a claim which can only be described as having particular resonance when viewed against the backdrop of recent events nationally, where -videotapes by citizens have proven to be indispensable in bringing to light instances where police unfortunately misused their power. The facts remain unproven, but Defendants here seek to prevent Plaintiffs- from even making their case by claiming that they are entitled to qualified immunity. When viewed against the allegation's of this Complaint, the assertion of that defense, which would terminate this case at its outset, brings into sharp focus the question of whether the doctrine of qualified immunity is being invoked more than is warranted. Suffice it to say 'that dismissing this Complaint at the pleading stage given the record before me would risk rendering the Bill of Rights meaningless, at least as it applies to the sanctity of a citizen’s home. Accordingly, the Motion to Dismiss has been denied.
Plaintiff Kia Gaymon is a 38-year-old social work supervisor for a nonprofit agency. She has a Masters of Social Work from Temple University. Her husband, Plaintiff Michael Gaymon,. is a 35-year-old technician with a telecommunications utility company, in addition to currently completing his college education. They have a 21-year-old daughter, Plaintiff Sanshuray Purnell, and a 10-year-old son. They own a home in Collingdale, Pennsylvania, where they have lived with their children since March 2007.
On February 22, 2014, Defendant Officers Carl White and William Eckert went to Plaintiffs’ home in-response to a call made by their next-door neighbor, who allegedly complained that Mr. Gaymon’s mother (a guest in their home at. the time) had parked her car so that the front tire was on the curb in front of the neighbor’s house. Upon arriving, the Defendant officers confronted Plaintiffs as they' were leaving for a family outing. According to the Complaint, Defendant White began yelling at them in an .aggressive manner, asking, who spit at their neighbor,
. Plaintiffs .Mrs, and Mr. Gaymon-- explained that-they had done nothing wrong, and that their neighbor falsely accused them of spitting at her.- - Defendant White then allegedly approached Mr. Gaymon in an antagonistic way, placing his face within inches of Mr. Gaymon’s face while yelling at him. Mrs. Gaymon, concerned about the officer’s aggressive conduct, took out her cell phone and began making a video recording. Officer White approached -Mrs. Gaymon, at which point she moved inside her home, continuing to video White by either leaning around the storm door or through the window in the door.
According to the Complaint, White ordered Mrs. Gaymon to stop videotaping him, and declared that her doing so violated Pennsylvania’s wiretap statute. Her husband and daughter, who were standing in front of their home, told White he was incorrect, and Mrs. Gaymon had a right to record. White told Mrs. Gaymon that if she did not . stop taping him, he would enter her house, seize her phone, and arrest her. Mrs. Gaymon told White he was not permitted to enter her home. He walked up the stairs to the front entrance, but before entering, he grabbed her daughter Sanshuray, handcuffed her, placed her under arrest, and threatened to deploy his Taser against her. Officer Ec-kert then removed Sanshuray from the scene. ■ •
Officer White is next alleged to have entered Plaintiffs’ home and ordered Mrs. Gaymon again tó stop videotaping him. Mrs. and Mr. Gaymon reiterated that they did not consent to his entry, and he was not permitted to be in their home. Ignoring them, Defendant White allegedly grabbed Mrs. Gaymon, pushed her up against the wall, and held his Taser to her chest. At this time, Defendant Officers Eckert and others identified as “John Does” joined Officer White and placed Mrs. Gaymon under arrest. They removed Mrs. Gaymon from her home, placed her in a separate police vehicle from her daughter, and drove both women to the Collingdale Police Station.
The officers released Mrs. Gaymon and Sanshuray from police custody later that day, stating they would receive citations in the mail for “disorderly conduct” under 18 Pa. Cons.Stat. § 5503, which they did. As a result, they retained counsel to represent them during their court proceeding. On May 22, 2014, Mrs. Gaymon and Sanshu-ray appeared before a Magisterial District Justice. After hearing testimony from Defendant White,, the Magisterial District Justice dismissed all charges.
The ■ Complaint consists of four civil rights claims brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against the Borough of Collingdale and the individual Defendants:, Officers White, Eckert, and Does. Mrs. Gaymon and Sanshuray Purnell assert a Fourth Amendment wrongful arrest claim (Count I); a Fourth Amendment malicious prosecution claim (Count II); and a First Amendment retaliatory arrest claim (Count III). Joined by Mr. Gaymon, they further assert a Fourth Amendment unlawful search violation (Count IV).
II. Discussion
Defendants moved to dismiss Plaintiffs’, Complaint, arguing that the Defendant officers are. entitled to qualified immunity. In their written motion, Defendants argued that whether Mrs. Gaymon’s conduct in recording Officer White violated the Pennsylvania Wiretap Act was not clearly established as of February 22, 2014, which would have resulted in dismissal of only Mrs. Gaymon’s unlawful arrest and malicious prosecution claims.
At oral argument, defense counsel took the bold position that qualified immunity should.be extended to shield the Defendant officers from all liability, including the constitutional claims alleged by Ms. Purnell and Mr. Gaymon. Defendants sought to redefine the focus of the qualified immunity analysis to whether there was a clearly established “First Amendment right to record” police, officers performing their official duties at the time of the alleged incident in 2014. I will analyze these distinct arguments separately, but the result remains the same regardless.of how one frames the issue. Under these circumstances, qualified immunity provides no defense.
a. Legal Standard
In determining whether the Defendant officers are shielded from liability based on qualified immunity, I must accept Plaintiffs’ factual allegations as true and draw all reasonable inferences in their favor. Ashcroft v. Iqbal,
To overcome the defense of qualified immunity, Plaintiffs must allege facts showing that the Defendant officers’ conduct (1) “violated a statutory or constitutional right, and (2) that the right was ‘clearly established’ at the time of the challenged conduct.” George,
Defendants bear the burden of establishing their entitlement to the affirmative defense of qualified immunity. See Halsey v. Pfeiffer,
Of particular significance here:
[t]o be established clearly, however, there is no need that “the very action in question [have] previously been held unlawful.” Wilson v. Layne,526 U.S. 603 , 615,119 S.Ct. 1692 ,143 L.Ed.2d 818 (1999). The unconstitutionality of outrageous conduct obviously will be unconstitutional, this being the reason, as Judge Posner has said, that “[t]he easiest cases don’t even arise.” K.H. v. Morgan,914 F.2d 846 , 851 (7th Cir.1990). But even as to action less than an outrage, “officials can still be on notice that their conduct violates established law ... in novel factual circumstances.” Hope v. Pelzer, [536 U.S. at 741 ,122 S.Ct. 2508 ].
Safford Unified Sch. Dist. No. 1 v. Redding,
b. The Charge of Disorderly Conduct
Upon review of the record here, I find it appropriate to echo the Third Circuit in Schneyder, because this case strikes me as “a member of that class of ‘easiest cases’ that, according to Judge Posner, ‘don’t even arise.’ ”
A person is guilty of disorderly conduct if, with intent to cause public inconvenience, annoyance or alarm, or recklessly creating a risk thereof, he:
(1) engages in fighting or threatening, or in violent or tumultuous behavior;
(2) makes unreasonable noise;
(3) uses obscene language, or makes an obscene gesture; or
(4) creates a hazardous or physically offensive condition by any act which serves no legitimate purpose of the actor.
18 Pa. Cons.Stat. § 5503(a).-
Section (c) of the statute specifically defines “public” as “affecting ■ or likely to affect persons in a place ■ to which the public or a substantial group has access; among the places included are highways, transport facilities, schools, prisons, apartment houses, places of business or amusement, any neighborhood, or any premises which are open to the public.” Plaintiffs plead that they were on their own property, preparing to leave their home on á family outing when the Defendant officers approached them in an accusatory and aggressive manner, and that the officers followed Mrs. Gaymon inside.
The threshold question for each of Plaintiffs’ Fourth Amendment claims is whether the Defendant officers had probable cause to believe Mrs. Gaymon and Ms. Purnell violated the disorderly conduct statute. Henry v. United States,
In evaluating the basis for the charge'in this case, it is hard to fathom how individuals could intend to cause public inconvenience op alarm based on actions that occurred exclusively' on their own property and from, within their home. I find it equally hard to understand how merely videotaping an officer’s conduct, and thereafter retreating away from an officer to the confines of one’s own home, could be in any way causing public inconvenience, annoyance, or alarm. Even harder to comprehend is how Ms. Purriell’s conduct in informing Officer White about her belief that Mrs. Gaymon had a'right to record could amount to disorderly conduct. The Supreme Court has directly considered factual circumstances where a petitioner was arrested for disorderly conduct after “verbally and negatively” protesting a police officer’s treatment of him, and concluded that “[s]urely, one is not to be punished for nonprovocatively voicing his objection to what he obviously felt was a highly questionable detention by a police officer.” Norwell v. City of Cincinnati,
In viewing all facts in the light most favorable to Plaintiffs, as I must, the only aspect of the facts alleged in the Complaint that could alarm the public would be the actions of the- police officers in question. Officer White allegedly threatened to deploy :a Taser against two' unarmed women,, and ultimately forced his way into the Gaymon’s home and pinned Mrs. Gay-mon against a wall with, a Taser to her chest — -all in the course of responding to a nuisance complaint during daylight hours. Even defense counsel could barely muster an argument as to Mrs. Gaymon’s disorderly conduct charge: ■
The Court: The arrest took place inside Ms. Gaymon’s house, correct?
[Counsel]: According to the complaint, that’s the way we understand it, yes____
The Court: And at that point when Ms. Gaymon would be inside, would you agree with me there was no threat to the officer outside, correct?
[Counsel]: .1. would agree with that circumstance.
The Court: And you would agree with me that standing inside on one’s porch simply videotaping, that could not be considered disorderly conduct by any reasonable definition, could it, sir?
[Counsel]: If you’re standing inside your home , and , vidéotaping outside, no, I don’t think so. .
Transcript of Oral Argument, April 10, 2015, at 9.
Based on the foregoing, any reasonable officer should have known that pursuing disorderly' conduct charges against Mrs. Gaymon and Ms, Purnell constituted a blatant violation of their Fourth Amendment
I next turn to the specific grounds on which Defendants seek to cloak their actions with qualified immunity.
c. Purported Violation of the Pennsylvania Wiretap Act
In their brief, Defendants argued that Pennsylvania law was not clearly established in 2014 regarding whether the Wiretap Act, 18 Pa. Cons.Stat. §§ 5701-82, gave them1 authority to act' as they ■ did. This argument is patently lacking in merit. Defendants’ initial argument relied almost exclusively on the Third Circuit’s unpublished decision in Kelly v. Borough of Carlisle,
Qualified immunity was found in Kelly II because the officer sought out and in good faith relied upon advice received from a prosecuting attorney during a traffic stop — an entirely distinct set of circumstances.
■ Given the clear state of controlling federal and state law in 2014, ^Defendants are left to .argue that officers should be entitled to deference for the split-second decisions they must make in the field under a variety of uncertain and rapidly evolving circumstances, and that no officer can be a “constitutional scholar.” Defendants’ Brief at 10. ,
In no respect' does the controlling law in this case impose a burden' on an officer to be a legal expert. By its very nature, the term “wiretapping” connotes covert action.
THE COURT: Isn’t the' Pennsylvania Wiretap Act clearly aimed at covert or surreptitious interception of communica*466 tion rather than open and obvious recording communication?
COUNSEL: I think that’s true.
Transcript of Oral Argument, April 10, 2015, at 7. Indeed, based upon the Court’s review, there is no reported case of a conviction under the Act for open reporting.
Here, Mrs. Gaymon openly videotaped the officers, and the recording took place within the curtilage of her property and inside her home. No officer could credibly claim any expectation of privacy on Plaintiffs’ property or inside their house. If anyone had an expectation of privacy under these circumstances, it was clearly the Gaymons. Unlike Kelly II, there are no allegations that Defendant White stopped and in good faith sought advice provided from a prosecuting authority. Moreover, in Kelly there was at least some basis on which a uniformed officer might be confused, because the recording there was “surreptitious,” as opposed to Mrs. Gay-mon’s open and obvious recording. Without a doubt, Mrs. Gaymon wanted the officer to know he was being recorded. This was not an “inherently dangerous situation,” such as a traffic stop. Kelly I,
Finally, it is telling that Mrs. Gaymon was never charged with a violation of the Wiretap Act. If the Defendant officers mistakenly believed that Mrs. Gaymon’s conduct violated the Wiretap Act, it is reasonable to infer that they would have charged Mrs. Gaymon with that offense, and of course they did not.
d. The Relevance of a “Right to Videotape!’
• Perhaps recognizing the lack' of legal support for them Wiretap Act stance, Defendants’ position shifted at oral argument, attempting to redefine the issue as whether Mrs. Gaymon had a First Amendment right to video her family’s interaction with the officers in question.
[Counsel]: I think the basic issue that we’re going to be coming back-to again in this case is whether there is a clearly established constitutional right- to videotape law enforcement officers as they are performing their duties.
THE COURT: But, isn’t that a separate question from whether the officer here had any good faith basis to .take people into custody under the wiretap law? Isn’t the First Amendment issue separate from the actions of the defendants?
[Counsel]: I think they are really bound together, Your Honor. I don’t see how you can get to one without getting to the other.; I think ■ this officer, rightly or*467 wrongly, believed that the law did say, or at least the law was not established enough, that they did not have — anybody did not have a clearly established constitutional right to videotape it, and I think that’s where we start with in" this' ease, so I think everything at this stage is going to flow back to that.
Transcript of Oral Argument, April 10, 2015, at 5-7.
For practical purposes, the defense seeks to find refuge in Montgomery v. Killingsworth, No. 13-256,
Turning to Killingsworth itself, it involved . plaintiffs who were arrested in 2011 for three unrelated interactions with Philadelphia police officers. Id. at *1. Two plaintiffs pleaded First Amendment retaliation claims, arguing that the act of recording police activity was protected conduct. Id. The third plaintiff claimed retaliation for peacefully objecting to a police officer’s treatment of an intoxicated man on her street. Id. Judge Yohn held that a right to record officers in public was not clearly established as of 2011. Id. at *15. Accordingly, for those plaintiffs alleging retaliation based solely on the purported First Amendment right to record, the defendant officers were entitled to qualified immunity.
In contrast, qualified immunity was rejected for the remaining First Amendment claim because “peaceful criticism of a police officer that neither obstructs an investigation nor jeopardizes a police officer’s safety has strong social value, serving as a valuable check on state power, and is therefore -protected1, under the First Amendment.” Killingsworth,
Here, Defendants’ attempt to redefine all of Plaintiffs’ claims as subsumed within an ambiguous question of law is a misuse of the doctrine of qualified immunity.
Killingsworth involved events in 2011, Even if I assume that there was still no clearly established First Amendment right to record officers by 2014, the lack of such a right would not transform a citizen’s act of recording on her own property to something criminal in nature justifying arrest. It is certainly clear that the absence of a First Amendment right to record from the confines of one’s own home would not amount to exigent or other circumstances that would justify entering" the Plaintiffs’ home without a valid warrant or consent. See, e.g., Steagald,
Finally, Plaintiffs’ retaliatory arrest claim focuses on the Plaintiffs’ First Amendment right to “verbally express their disagreement with and challenge the authority” of the Defendant officers. Complaint at Count III. “The Supreme Court has explicitly held that an individual has a viable claim against the government when he is able to prove that the government took action against him in retaliation for his exercise of First Amendment rights.” Anderson v. Davila,
It is the combination of factors that make this case compelling to the Court on the facts alleged: the frivolous nature of the neighbor’s initial complaint; the absence of lurking risks inherent in other police activities, such as traffic stops; the alleged aggressiveness of the responding officers; the purported threat to deploy Tasers against a family on the premises of their'own home; the overall disproportionate response of law enforcement; the protective instincts of a wife and mother seeking only to record what was occurring; the makeweight nature of the criminal charges brought; and finally, the contorted nature of the qualified immunity defense raised.
Defendants have the right to contest, and may well disprove, these allegations at trial. But the contention that no reasonable officer would have understood that such conduct would palpably violate our
Notes
. That is, even if the law concerning the Pennsylvania Wiretap Act was not clearly established in 2014, mistakenly finding probable cause for a violation of the Act would not have given the Defendant officers a license to enter the Gaymon’s home without legal cause or consent, or to arrest Ms. Purnell , for disagreeing with Defendant White’s actions. See, e.g., Steagald v. United States,
. "In other words, certain conduct will be so extreme that oiie -would not expect a prior
. The breadth of Pennsylvania’s disorderly conduct statute gives police broad latitude, which creates the potential for improper charges should that power be abused. See generally Thomas Place, Offensive Speech and the Pennsylvania Disorderly Conduct Statute, 12 Temple Political and Civil Rights L.Rev, 47 (2002) (discussing limits constructions that Pennsylvania courts have imposed on the state’s disorderly conduct statute, and arguing that parts of the statute are still unconstitu- - tionally overbroad or vague).
, Of note, two leading and commonly used ■ dictionaries, Merriam-Webster and Oxford, define wiretapping as action taken "secretly.”
. The Court raised the seemingly benign context of the original complaint to police during argument, to which defense counsel clarified, "Yes, I think according to the complaint, it’s not exactly spelled out, but there is a neighborhood dispute that apparently goes back and the complaint kind of picks up at the point where the officer is responding to [the neighbor’s report of a tire on the curb].” Transcript of- Oral Argument, April 10, 2015, at 11. I recognize that there is likely another side to the story, but at this early juncture, my review is limited. Plaintiffs allege that the officers responded to a complaint that Mr. Gaymon’s mother “parked her car in such a wáy that the front tire was on the curb in front of the neighbor’s house.” Complaint at ¶ 18.
. See George,
. I also note that although plaintiffs’ allegations included Fourth Amendment malicious prosecution, false arrest, false imprisonment, and illegal search and seizure claims, as well as a Fourteenth Amendment excessive force claim, the defendant officers in Killingsworth notably, and in this Court's view, wisely, limited their summary judgment motion to the First Amendment retaliation claims.
.Critics of the expanding scope of qualified immunity have cautioned that courts applying the law risk blurring the line between absolute and qualified immunity. See, e.g., Susan Bendlin, "Qualified Immunity; Protecting 'All but the Plainly Incompetent’ (And Maybe Some of them, Too),”, 45 J. Marshall L.Rev. 1023, 1046 (Summer 2012). Of course, "it is appropriate to shield government workers from individual liability if they perform their jobs reasonably - and competently. The risk, however, is that the test is applied so broadly that it.may also protect those state officials who unreasonably arid incompetently violate the individual rights of a citizen.” Id. at 1049. ‘
. Although I do not need to reach the question of whether Mrs. Gaymon’s conduct in
Over the past decade, four circuits have decided cases in which a civilian recorded was arrested or forced to cease recording. The recorders, believing this to be a violation of their First Amendment rights, filed claims pursuant to 42 TJ.S.C. § 1983. The decisions collectively indicate that there is a ■firmly established First Amendment right to record .police officers, but that courts are only starting to address the Fourth Amendment concerns. While the recorder does have a First Amendment right to record, the right overlaps with Fourth Amendment jurisprudence dictating the reactions permissible by law .enforcement officers. In addition, the right to record cannot be so limitless as to allow recorders to directly interfere with law-enforcement.
Id. Indeed, within this' District, my colleague Judge Bartle found a First Amendment free speech right to videotape police officers as they went about their’ duties on a public highway in 2002, where the recording was done from private property and did not interfere with the police officers’ activity. Robinson v. Fetterman,
For examples of various policy and legal reasons that recording public officials should receive First Amendment protection, see Seth F. Kreimer, Pervasive Image Capture and the' First Amendment: Memory, Discourse, and the Right to Record, 159 U. Pa, L.Rrv. 335, 350-94 (2011):
[P]olice abuse captured by the cameras of bystanding videographers, followed by public broadcast of the footage, has become a regular feature of our public. life and the underpinning of effective demands for redress.... [Police] are accustomed ... to substantial deference in the construction of official narratives; and" many would prefer to be in a position to shape perceptions of- their actions without competing digital, records. ..Police officers often view private digital image capture as a challenge to their authority,... In' the last two generations, emerging technology ánd social practice have made captured images part of our cultural and political discourse. ... In the current state of the law and culture of discourse, captured images — like words inscribed on parchment— fall within the protection of "freedom of speech.” ... Participants in public dialogue who are barred from capturing'images are at a substantial discursive disadvantage vis-á-vis those who can record from life. Officials engage-in virtually unchecked surveillance of public encounters. A rule that bars citizens from capturing imáges gives unbalanced authority to official framing....' Allowing-statutes that prohibit- "interfering with an officer” or “disobeying an officer” to punish inconvenient image capture .puts police officers in the constitutionally impermissible position’of censoring ‘ critical expression with unconstitutional impunity. •
