Gerardo Gonzalez sued the City of Chicago, two of his supervisors, and Chicago’s Chief of Police, alleging retaliation for exercising his First Amendment right to free speech in violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and retaliatory discharge under Illinois law. The district court granted the defendants’ motion to dismiss with respect to the § 1983 claim on the merits and declined to exercise jurisdiction over the state law claim. Gonzalez appeals. We affirm.
I.
Beginning in July, 1991, Gerardo Gonzalez worked as a civilian employee of the Chicago Police Department’s Office of Professional Standards (OPS). As an OPS investigator, he looked into public complaints against officers in the Chicago Police Department for police misconduct or brutality, and following his investigations Gonzalez was required to summarize his conclusions in a written report. Gonzalez completed between fifty and one hundred such reports per month. All indications are that Gonzalez’s job performance was satisfactory.
In June 1998, Gonzalez resigned from OPS and joined the Chicago Police Department. On November 17, 1998, he graduated from the Police Academy and was subsequently assigned to the 18th District. During his tenure at OPS, Gonzalez investigated at least nine 18th District officers, and one investigation caused the termination of 18th District officer Hugh Robinson. He also investigated the father of an officer currently assigned to the 18th District, Sergeant Hanson.
Apparently due to these and perhaps other OPS investigations, Gonzalez allegedly met great hostility at the 18th District. During his ten weeks of field training, Gonzalez received two negative performance reports which he claims were “predicated upon falsified subjective information ... and motivated by retaliation for Plaintiffs exercise of his fair constitutional right of free speech ... while employed by OPS.” As a result of these evaluation reports, the Police Department suspended Gonzalez pending termination proceedings. On April 14, 1999, the Police Department terminated Gonzalez from his position.
After he was fired, Gonzalez sued the City of Chicago, the Chief of Police, and two of his supervisors, claiming the defendants retaliated against him for his speech as an OPS investigator in violation of § 1983 and Illinois law. The district court concluded that because his speech at OPS was that of an employee performing his job and not protected speech by a citizen which touched upon matters of public concern, the defendants had not violated his First Amendment rights. Having dismissed the only federal claim, the district court then declined to exercise jurisdiction over his state law claim of retaliatory discharge. Gonzalez appeals.
II.
The district court dismissed Gonzalez’s complaint for failure to state a First Amendment claim. We review such a dismissal de novo, accepting all well-pleaded factual allegations in the complaint as true, and make all permissible inferences in Gonzalez’s favor.
See Kyle v. Morton High School,
First Amendment claims by public employees asserting a violation against protected speech are analyzed under a two-step test. The first step, set forth in
Connick v. Myers,
is to determine whether the employee speaks “as a citizen upon matters of public concern.”
Where speech is intended to serve a private or personal interest, it may not meet the standards for First Amendment protected speech.
See Kokkinis v. Ivkovich,
The present case, however, occupies the flip side of the coin. Gonzalez’s statements are not self-serving private statements (except in the sense that performance of one’s job is selfserving), but written statements for internal use in the Department. They are reports on his investigations as required by his employer, and as such, they lack First Amendment protection. Both the
Connick
and
Pickering
cases explain that the First Amendment offers protection to speech uttered “as a citizen.”
See Connick,
If Gonzalez were writing reports of police misconduct, and his supervisors told him to rewrite the reports so as not to disclose police corruption, Gonzalez would have a First Amendment right to expose the police cover-up to the public. But in that circumstance, Gonzalez would be acting beyond his employment capacity. Instead of simply performing his job of writing truthful, internal reports, he would be speaking as a citizen on a matter of public concern — a police cover-up.
Thus, the question before us is whether a public employee receives First Amendment protection for producing writings that may address matters of public concern, but are also a routine requirement of the job. Gonzalez may well have been motivated in part as a good citizen when he accepted the employment duties of reporting police misconduct. Nevertheless, he was clearly acting entirely in an employment capacity when he made those reports. The form of his speech (routine official reports), the content of the speech (required opinions on misconduct), and the context (pursuant to duties of the job), all indicate that Gonzalez did not speak “as a citizen” on a matter of public concern.
This situation is distinguishable from our recent decision in
Bonds v. Milwaukee County,
All of Gonzalez’s speech at issue — the written reports — was mandated in his capacity as an OPS investigator. While police misconduct is certainly a matter of public concern, the internal reports were simply a summary of his findings following
*942
his official investigations. The few courts that have addressed circumstances like these have found that the speech was not protected by the First Amendment.
See, e.g., Koch v. City of Hutchinson,
Youker v. Schoenenberger,
For Gonzalez, there is no distinction from any of his allegedly protected speech and the required duties of his job. A failure to carry out this particular speech — writing accurate reports of assigned investigations — would be a dereliction of Gonzalez’s employment duties. Indeed, Gonzalez’s attorney conceded at oral argument that Gonzalez could have been fired had he not produced the reports. Here Gonzalez’s speech was clearly speech by an employee in the course of his employment, rather than speech by a citizen on a matter of public concern. Id. at 165.
Like the Tenth Circuit in
Koch,
we are not “establishing a per se rule exempting statements made in the course of official duties from the protection of the First Amendment.”
III.
Since Gonzalez’s speech in his employment capacity at OPS was not protected by the First Amendment, his § 1983 claim fails. The district court appropriately granted the City of Chicago’s motion to dismiss. Also, while the district court properly exercised its discretion in declining to accept supplemental jurisdiction, that decision and our affirmance should not reflect any view on the validity of the state law claim of discharge in retaliation *943 for Gonzalez’s investigation reports that he authored during his tenure at OPS. The district court’s decision is AffiRmed.
