Stаnley Gordy filed this § 1983 action against officers of the Jefferson Parish Sheriffs Department. Gordy’s sole viable claim was for malicious prosecution arising from his arrest for possession of marijuana with intent to distribute. Following a non-jury trial, a magistrate judge entered judgment for Gordy and awarded him $20,000 in damages. Having reviewed the record, we conclude that the officers are entitled to judgment as a matter of law because there was probable cause to support the drug charges.
I. BACKGROUND
. In late August 1997, Lieutenant Glenn Davis of the Jefferson Parish Sheriffs Department received a telephone call from an agent of the federal Drug Enforcement Administration. The DEA agent informed Lieutenant Davis that United Parcel Service employees in California had discovered a package containing approximately 20 pоunds of marijuana addressed to “C. Charles” at an apartment in Metairie, Louisiana. Davis drove to the apartment and observed that the name on the mailbox was “M. Gordy” (rather than “C. Charles”), but he assumed that the addressee’s name was fictitious. Later that evening, Lieutenant Davis submitted an affidavit and application for a search warrant to a Jefferson Parish district judge. The affidavit read in part, “[U]pon arrival оf the package containing the marijuana[,] a controlled delivery will be attempted.... Officers request that a search warrant be issued subsequent to this delivery.” The judge issued the search warrant.
Lieutenant Gerard Simone and Officers William Burns and Robert Gerdes delivered the package on September 2, 1997. There is conflicting testimony as to whether a UPS agent went to the door or whether Lieutenant Simone pоsed as a UPS agent. The key fact, however, is that defendant Stanley Gordy accepted the package from someone he believed was.a UPS delivery-man. Gordy admits signing the receipt using his nickname, “Chuck Gor-dy,” but he insists that he did not look carefully at the package before signing for it.
The officers waited a few minutes before approaching the apartment to execute the search warrаnt. It is undisputed that Gor-dy stepped out of the apartment, paused for a moment, and then went back inside and locked the door. Gordy testified that he was going to McDonald’s when he realized that he had no cash, so he went to retrieve his wallet. The officers testified that Gordy scampered inside after making eye contact with the officers, who were wearing “raid jackets” identifying them as policemen. The officers forced their way into the apartment, arrested Gordy, took custody of the package, and searched the apartment before taking Gordy to the sheriffs office.
Officer Burns prepared the police report on behalf of the officers. Officer Burns’s report omitted certain facts, most notably that Gordy had not opened the package and that the package contained approximately 15 pounds of marijuana instead of 20 pounds, as the officers had expected.
Gordy was charged with possession of marijuana with intent to distribute, and a bill of information was filed. However, the district attorney ultimately decided not to prosecute the case and issued a nolle pro-sequi on March 2, 1998. The record of these state court proceedings was expunged at Gordy’s request, and neither party introduced evidence indicating why the district attorney abandoned the prosecution.
On March 1, 1999, Gordy filed this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against Jefferson Parish Sheriff Harry Lee, Lieutenant Simone, and Officers Burns and Gerdes. *725 Gordy’s complaint included claims for false arrest, unlawful search and seizure, false imprisonment, excessive force, and malicious prosecution—all in violation of the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments. The parties agreed to a non-jury trial before a magistrate judge. See 28 U.S.C. § 636(c).
The magistrate judge dismissed all of Gordy’s claims except malicious prosecution as time-barred.
See Jacobsen v. Osborne,
The sole claim at trial, then, was malicious prosecution. Gordy argued that he was prosecuted because the officers maliciously provided false or misleading information to the district attorney. The magistrate judge agreed. After ruling that the officers were not entitled to qualified immunity, the magistrate judge entered judgment for Gordy and awarded him $12,000 in compensatory damages and $8,000 in punitive damages. This appeal followed.
II. DISCUSSION
A
It would be an understatement to say that this circuit’s caselaw regarding so-called “Fourth Amendment malicious prosecution” claims under § 1983 is both confused and confusing.
See, e.g., Kerr v. Lyford,
Unquestionably, state-law tort claims—such as the common-law tort of malicious prosecution—are not, by themselves, actionable under § 1983.
Price v. Roark,
Nevertheless, the rule in this circuit is that the elements of the state-law tort of malicious prosecution and the elements of the constitutional tort of “Fourth Amendment malicious prosecution” are coextensive.
See Piazza v. Mayne,
Most other circuits emphasize, however, that a malicious prosecution claim under § 1983 is more appropriately characterized as “a Fourth Amendment claim for unreasonable seizure which incorporates certain elements of the common law tort.”
Lambert v. Williams,
But in the Fifth Circuit, a plaintiff in a § 1983 malicious prosecution action need establish only the elements of common-law malicious prosecution. This circuit repeatеdly has indicated — without explanation — that courts must look to the elements of a malicious prosecution claim under the law of the state where the offense was committed. The confusion that arises is illustrated nicely by the
post-Albright
decision in
Taylor v. Gregg,
Given this circuit’s precedent, the plaintiff in this case had to prove the six elements of malicious prosecution under Louisiana tort law: (1) the commencement or continuance of an original criminal proceeding; (2) its legal causation by the present defendant against plaintiff who was defendant in thе original proceeding; (3) its bona fide termination in favor of the present plaintiff; (4) the absence of probable cause for such proceeding; (5) malice; and (6) damages.
Piazza v. Mayne,
The facts of this case present a novel problem arising from our willy-nilly incorporаtion of state tort law into constitutional litigation. In Louisiana malicious prosecution actions, the state courts have held that if criminal charges are dismissed prior to trial, a presumption arises that there was no probable cause for the proceedings, and the burden shifts to the defendant to prove the presence of probable cause and the absence of malice.
See Williams v. DiVittoria,
To sum up thus far: The plaintiff in this case had to prove all the elements of malicious prosecution under Louisiana tort law. Nevertheless, a Fourth Amendment malicious prosecution claim is essentially a federal constitutional claim, and federal courts are bound neither by the state courts’ interpretation of those elements nor (we think) by procedural requirements like the burden-shifting framework imposed by Louisiana courts.
The crux of this case is whether there was probable cause for the criminal proceedings against Gordy. With respect to probable cause, this court has held that
*728 For purposes of malicious prosecution, probаble cause means “the existence of such facts and circumstances as would excite the belief, in a reasonable mind, acting on the facts within the knowledge of the prosecutor, that the person charged was guilty of the crime for which he was prosecuted.”
Kerr v. Lyford,
B
We now apply these principles to the facts of this case. As noted above, the magistrate judge concluded that the defendants had no probable cause to believe that an offense had been committed, that the officers misstated or omitted facts in their police report provided to the district attorney, that they did so maliciously, and that the officers’ actions were a legal cause of Gord/s prosecution on drug charges. The existence of probable cause is a mixed question of law and fact: Although factual findings are reviewed for clear error, we review the legal conclusion reached by the district court
de novo. Cf. Ornelas v. United States,
The magistrate judge’s determination that the officers lacked probable cause is based entirely on technical deficiencies in the search warrant issued by the Jefferson Parish district judge. Although the officer’s affidavit requested that a search warrant be issued “subsequent to this [controlled] delivery,” the warrant itself— which was issued just two hours after the *729 officer received the tip from the DEA agent in California- — -authorized the officers to sеarch the apartment “forthwith”. The magistrate judge ruled that, first, the search warrant went “beyond the scope justified by probable cause because there was no justification for searching ‘forthwith,’ and, second, the defect in the search warrant could not be cured by the affidavit or by the fact that the officers did not execute the search warrant until .after the package was delivered.
We need not address the substance of the magistrate judge’s analysis. The validity of the search warrant is irrelevant to whether an officer reasonably could have believed that Gordy had committed the crime of possessing marijuana with intent to distribute. The most obvious reason is that probable cause to institute criminal proceedings must be determined as of the time that charges were filed. 7 The magistrate judge erred by focusing oh probable cause to search the apartment, even though she had already dismissed Gordy’s § 1983 claim- for an unreasonable search in violation of the Fourth Amendment.
The correct question, then, is whether the officers, at the time Gordy was charged, had probable cause to believe that he was guilty of possessing marijuana with intent to distribute. We focus on what the officers reasonably and honеstly believed: First, the package sitting on the floor of the apartment contained a significant amount of marijuana. Second, the package was addressed to the apartment where Gordy lived with his mother. Third, although the addressee was “C. Charles,” Lieutenant Davis testified that he had worked on at least ten cases where drug traffickers had used false names on packages. Fourth, Gordy accepted the package and placed it inside the apartment. Fifth, he signed for the package using his nickname, “Chuck,” a variation of “Charles.” And, sixth, as the police were approaching the apartment, Gordy (for whatever reason) walked outside the apartment but quickly went back inside and locked the door. These basic facts are beyond dispute and are sufficient to establish probable cаuse to believe that Gordy had committed a criminal offense.
To be sure, there was evidence suggesting that Gordy may not have been guilty of the offense. Gordy insisted that the package was misaddressed and that he did not know what was in the box. There was also the undisputed fact that Gordy had not opened the box when the officers entered his apartment. Nor did the police find any evidence of drug use or traffiсking during their search of the apartment. However, the probable cause inquiry does not require a showing that the officer’s belief was correct or that it was more likely true than false; rather, “the probable cause analysis only .requires that we find a basis for an officer to believe to a ‘fair probability’ that a violation occurred.”
Piazza,
As there was probable cause to charge Gordy with possession of marijuana, we need not reach the related issues whether the officers caused Gordy’s prosecution by omitting relevant information from the police report, whether they acted out of malice, or whether they were entitled to qualified immunity.
*730 III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the magistrate judge is REVERSED, and the case is REMANDED for entry of judgment in favor of the defendants.
REVERSED and REMANDED.
Notes
. It remains unclear whether Albright will be extended to approve the constitutionalizing of malicious prosecution claims, see Kerr, supra, (Jones, J. concurring), but the federal courts have so applied Albright.
. In
Price,
this court appeared to be moving in that direction when it stated that a § 1983 plaintiff must provе "that he was exposed to an unreasonable search or seizure in violation of the Fourth Amendment.”
Price,
. Brown
was a Federal Tort Claims Act case in which the plaintiff alleged that he was subject to malicious prosecution after an FBI agent gave false testimony to a grand jury. The FTCA provides that the United States may be held liable "under circumstances where the United States, if a private person, would be liable to the claimant in accordance with the law of the place wherе the act or omission occurred.” 28 U.S.C. § 1346(b). Consequently, the court had to interpret and apply the tort law of the state of Texas because all the alleged wrongful acts occurred there.
Brown,
. Other panels of this circuit, however, have given some weight to state court decisions interpreting the elements of malicious prosecution.
See, e.g., Izen v. Catalina,
. Only a handful of states follow Louisiana's approach.
See
H.D. Warren, Annotation,
Acquittal, Discharge, or Discontinuance of Criminal Charge as Evidence of Want of Probable Cause in Malicious Prosecution Action,
.
Hand
and
Wheeler
assumed that the "constitutional tort” of malicious prosecution was rooted in Fourteenth Amendment principles of substantive due process — a position rejected by the Supreme Court in
Albright v. Oliver,
. It is undisputed that the officers’ involvement with this case ended when charges were filed.
