In this case, we must decide whether former Attorney General Janet Reno, former Commissioner of the Immigration and Naturalization Service (“INS”) Doris Meissner, and former Deputy Attorney General Eric Holder are entitled to qualified immunity for their alleged involvement in the seizure of Elian Gonzalez (“Elian”) from the home of Lazaro, Angela, and Marisleysis Gonzalez (“the Gonza-lezes”) — Elian’s great-uncle, great-aunt, and cousin — on April 22, 2000. The defendants asserted their qualified immunity defense in a motion to dismiss, which the district court denied. We now reverse.
I.
A.
On September 28, 2000, the Gonzalezes commenced this action under
Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents of Federal Bureau of Narcotics,
On January 5, 2000, INS Commissioner Meissner decided that the INS would not consider the requests for asylum because Elian’s father, a Cuban citizen, had requested that Elian be returned to Cuba. On January 7, 2000, Lazaro filed a petition for temporary custody of Elian in the Family Division of the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, which was granted pending a full hearing on the matter.
On January 12, 2000, Attorney General Reno affirmed Meissner’s decision not to consider the petitions for political asylum. Lazaro challenged Reno’s ruling in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida, and the court upheld Reno’s decision. Lazaro appealed to this court. See Gonzalez v. Reno, No. 00-11424-D (11th Cir. Apr. 19, 2000) (unpublished opinion).
On April 6, 2000, while that appeal was pending, Elian’s father arrived in the United States. On April 12, 2000, the INS instructed Lazaro to bring Elian to Opa Locka Airport, and advised Lazaro that the parole of Elian into his care was being *1232 transferred to Elian’s father. On April 13, 2000, the circuit court dismissed Lazaro’s petition for temporary custody and vacated its prior order granting temporary custody to Lazaro.
On April 19, 2000, a panel of this court entered an order enjoining Elian from departing, or attempting to depart, the United States; enjoining all persons acting on his behalf from aiding, or assisting or attempting to aid or assist, Elian’s removal from the United States; and enjoining all officers, agents, and employees of the United States to take such reasonable and lawful measures as necessary to prevent the removal of Elian from the United States. Gonzalez, supra. On April 20, 2000, the Gonzalezes began negotiations with Reno, Meissner, and Holder toward the goal of transferring temporary custody of Elian.
Even though it was purporting to negotiate a peaceful transfer of the child, the INS issued an administrative warrant for Elian’s arrest on April 21, 2000. The arrest warrant asserted that Elian was within the United States in violation of the immigration laws and could therefore be taken into custody. The INS then obtained a search warrant to enter the Gon-zalezes’ home and search for Elian.
At approximately 5:15 a.m. on April 22, 2000, armed federal agents arrived at the Gonzalezes’ residence to execute the search and arrest warrants. In the course of executing the warrants, the agents allegedly sprayed gas into the residence; broke down the front door with a battering ram and entered the residence without first announcing their presence; sprayed more gas; pointed guns at the occupants of the residence, threatening to shoot; shouted obscenities; and broke doors, furniture, and religious artifacts. As one federal agent pointed a weapon at one of the occupants and Elian, INS agent Betty Mills entered the room with a blanket and seized the child.
B.
Based on the foregoing factual allegations, the Gonzalezes claim in their complaint that the defendants violated their First Amendment rights of freedom of expression and assembly (Count I), their Fourth Amendment rights to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures (Count II), and their Fifth Amendment rights to a liberty interest in personal security and to be free from unnecessary and unreasonable force (Count III). The complaint also claims that the defendants conspired to violate each of these constitutional rights (Counts IV-VI).
Defendants Reno, Meissner, Holder, and Mills moved to dismiss the claims against them arguing that plaintiffs’ complaint failed to state a claim against them and that they were entitled to qualified immunity from damages claims in their individual capacity. The district court addressed the defendants’ motion to dismiss in an order dated June 5, 2001.
The court dismissed Count I of the complaint without prejudice after concluding that the Gonzalezes failed to allege any facts supporting their theory that the federal agents’ entry into their home was undertaken for the purpose of abridging their First Amendment rights. The court dismissed Count III with prejudice after the Gonzalezes conceded in their response that their excessive force claims should be analyzed under Fourth Amendment search and seizure analysis rather than Fifth Amendment substantive due process analysis. The court also dismissed the conspiracy claims in Counts IV-VI.
With respect to the Gonzalezes’ Fourth Amendment claims in Count II, the court held that the Gonzalezes lacked standing to challenge the validity of the administrative arrest warrant. The court dismissed *1233 the Gonzalezes’ Fourth Amendment claims challenging the validity of the search warrant after concluding that the warrant was valid because the magistrate who issued it was presented with a facially valid arrest warrant and an affidavit establishing probable cause to believe that Elian was in the Gonzalezes’ home. The court dismissed Betty Mills as a defendant without prejudice because the complaint contained no allegations of excessive force by her. The court denied the motion to dismiss with respect to the excessive force claims against the other federal agents because it found that the Gonzalezes had alleged sufficient facts to support their claim that the federal agents (other than Mills) who executed the warrant at their home used excessive force, in violation of their Fourth Amendment rights.
The court also denied the motion to dismiss with respect to the defense of qualified immunity. The court concluded that the complaint alleged the requisite “causal connection” between the supervisory actions of Reno, Meissner, and Holder and the alleged constitutional violation by the agents on the scene to hold them liable based on their supervisory status, notwithstanding their absence from the scene. The court based this finding on paragraphs 70 and 75 of the complaint, which alleged that Reno, Meissner, and Holder “personally directed and caused a paramilitary raid upon Plaintiffs’ residence” and that the agents on the scene “acted under the personal direction of Defendants JANET RENO, DORIS MEISSNER AND ERIC HOLDER.”
Reno, Meissner, and Holder now appeal, challenging the district court’s rejection of their qualified immunity defense. We reverse.
II.
We have jurisdiction to review the denial of the defense of qualified immunity on interlocutory appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
Mitchell v. Forsyth,
The defense of qualified immunity completely protects government officials performing discretionary functions from suit in their individual capacities unless their conduct violates “clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.”
Hope v. Pelzer,
*1234
To receive qualified immunity, the government official must first prove that he was acting within his discretionary authority.
Vinyard v. Wilson,
Once the defendants have established that they were acting within their discretionary authority, the burden shifts to the plaintiffs to show that qualified immunity is not appropriate.
Id.
The Supreme Court has set forth a two part analysis for determining whether qualified immunity is appropriate.
Saucier v. Katz,
Our first step, then, is to determine whether the factual allegations in the complaint, if true, establish a constitutional violation by Reno, Meissner, and Holder.
Id.
The district court properly characterized the complaint as alleging that Reno, Meissner, and Holder are liable in their supervisory capacities only. For purposes of this opinion, therefore, we will assume, without deciding, that the alleged conduct by the agents on the scene—spraying gas into the house, breaking down the front door, pointing guns at plaintiffs, and damaging property—constituted excessive force and deprived plaintiffs of their Fourth Amendment rights to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures.
See Hartley v. Parnell,
“It is well established in this circuit that supervisory officials are not liable under
[Bivens]
for the unconstitutional acts of their subordinates ‘on the basis of respondeat superior or vicarious liability.’ ”
Id.
at 1269 (quoting
Belcher v. City of Foley,
“Supervisory liability [under
Bivens]
occurs either when the supervisor personally participates in the alleged constitutional violation or when there is a causal connection between actions of the supervising official and the alleged constitutional violation.”
Braddy,
In examining the factual allegations in the complaint, we must keep in mind the heightened pleading requirements for civil rights cases, especially those involving the defense of qualified immunity.
GJR Investments, Inc. v. County of Escambia,
We now turn to the complaint to determine whether plaintiffs have alleged sufficient facts to establish supervisory liability. Plaintiffs allege that these defendants “personally directed and caused a paramilitary raid upon [their] residence, and had actual knowledge of, and agreed to, and approved of, and acquiesced in, the raid in violation of the Fourth Amendment rights of Plaintiffs herein.” Plaintiffs also allege that the agents on the scene “acted under the personal direction of Defendants, JANET RENO, DORIES MEISS-NER and ERIC HOLDER, and with the knowledge, agreement, approval, and acquiescence of Defendants, JANET RENO, DORIS MEISSNER and ERIC HOLDER.” Finally, plaintiffs allege that these defendants “personally participated in the constitutional violations, and there was clearly a causal connection between their actions and the constitutional deprivation.”
These vague and conclusory allegations do not establish supervisory liability. Plaintiffs make bold statements and legal conclusions without alleging any facts to support them. Plaintiffs appeal to the emotions by calling the events that transpired a paramilitary raid, but they do not allege any facts to suggest that the defendants did anything more than personally direct and cause the execution of valid search and arrest warrants. Plaintiffs state that there is a causal connection between these defendants’ acts and the excessive force used by the agents on the scene, but they do not allege any facts to support this causal connection. Plaintiffs do not allege that these defendants directed the agents on the scene to spray the house with gas, break down the door with a battering ram, point guns at the occupants, or damage property. Given the presumption of legitimacy accorded to official conduct, it would be unreasonable to draw from the alleged facts the inference that the supervisory defendants directed the agents on the scene to engage in the *1236 unconstitutional activity with which they are charged. Instead, the reasonable inference which we must draw from the factual allegations is that the supervisory defendants ordered the execution of valid search and arrest warrants with the expectation that the agents on the scene would execute them in a lawful manner.
In sum, plaintiffs allege that the agents on the scene used excessive force in violation of their Fourth Amendment rights, but they fail to allege any facts which, if true, would establish that the supervisory defendants caused that violation. Because plaintiffs have failed to allege that the supervisory defendants’ conduct constituted a constitutional violation, the supervisory defendants are entitled to qualified immunity under the first step in our qualified immunity analysis. The decision of the district court is therefore REVERSED.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The Gonzalezes’ complaint also asserts claims against William O’Brien, individually and in his official capacity as Chief of the City of Miami Police Department; John Brooks, individually and in his official capacity as Assistant Chief of the City of Miami Police Department; and the City of Miami. The district court addressed these defendants’ motions to dismiss in an order dated April 16, 2001, which is not before us in this appeal.
