Stephen Hanes sued the Village of Grayslake, Illinois, and eleven officers of its police department, alleging that the officers denied him' — and only him — equal protection of the law, solely for reasons of personal animus. Relying on
Hilton v. City of Wheeling,
I
Hanes’s complaint is straightforward: it alleges that as a result of a long-running and somewhat mysterious dispute with his neighbors, both Hanes and the neighbors have complained repeatedly to the police. Yet when the police respond, they arrest only Hanes, no matter who initiated the complaint. They have arrested him at least eight times, and those arrests have led to thirteen criminal charges for minor crimes. Every single charge was later dropped. According to Hanes, the police have treated him unequally by ignoring his complaints against others and arresting only him because they “hate” him and “do not respect him.” Those reasons, Hanes insists, are “unrelated to the police officers’ duties.”
The officers moved to dismiss Hanes’s complaint for failure to state a claim, arguing that selective enforcement of the law can never violate the equal protection clause under a class-of-one theory because of the discretion inherent in police power. The officers acknowledged that, under our opinion in Hilton, Hanes’s allegations state a claim, but they argued that the Supreme Court’s opinion in Engquist implicitly overruled Hilton. The officers also argued that they were entitled to qualified immunity, but they conceded that if the district court refused to revisit Hilton, it should reject their qualified immunity argument as well. The district court concluded that it was bound by Hilton and denied the officers’ motion. Its order did not explicitly mention qualified immunity.
II
The court’s failure to discuss qualified immunity caused us to question whether we have before us a nonappealable order denying a motion to dismiss, see
Khorrami v. Rolince,
A closer look at this case reveals, however, that it is not the same as
Gosnell.
In
Gosnell,
it was not only unclear whether the district court intended to rule on qualified immunity; it was also unclear whether the defendants intended to raise the defense.
Id.
at 1259. The defendants in
Gosnell
seemed to have forgotten about the issue when they filed a second motion for summary judgment. In the present case, there is no ambiguity about the officers’ intent-their motion to dismiss explicitly raises the defense, and their, supporting memorandum contains a detailed discussion of the issue. Hanes responded in kind, ensuring that the issue was fully briefed for the district court. Because qualified immunity was unambiguously before the district court, its denial of the motion to dismiss necessarily included a denial of the defense of qualified immunity. See
In re Montgomery County,
As the Supreme Court recently reaffirmed in
Pearson v. Callahan,
— U.S. -,
Gosnell
is distinguishable for another reason as well. There, the discussion in the district court’s ruling had nothing to do with qualified immunity.
Gosnell,
Finally, accepting jurisdiction over this appeal is consistent with the Supreme Court’s reminder that qualified immunity is “both a defense to liability and a limited ‘entitlement not to stand trial or face the other burdens of litigation.’ ”
Ashcroft v. Iqbal,
— U.S. -, -,
Ill
With our jurisdiction secure, we may now move to the officers’ argument that they are entitled to qualified immunity. As they did in the district court, the officers rely almost exclusively on the Supreme Court’s decision in Engquist and its purported effect on our holding in Hilton.
A
We consider first the question whether the facts Hanes alleged describe a constitutional violation. See
Pearson,
In
Hilton,
we relied on
Olech
to explain how a class-of-one claim could be made against police officers for unequal enforcement of the law.
Hilton,
The officers’ central argument is that we should reconsider
Hilton
in light of the Supreme Court’s recent holding in
Engquist
that public employers cannot be liable for class-of-one equal protection violations.
Engquist
undermines
Hilton,
the officers argue, because it holds that the class-of-one theory is poorly suited to government actors who exercise • “discretionary authority based on subjective, individualized determinations.”
Engquist,
*495
The Supreme Court’s reasoning in
Engquist
sheds light on the reach of its holding. First, the Court emphasized that the judgments unsuited to a class-of-one claim are typically “subjective and individualized, resting on a wide array of factors that are difficult to articulate and quantify.”
Id.
at 2154-55. That describes employment decisions because treating like individuals differently in the employment context is “par for the course.”
Id.
at 2155. Second, the Court noted that the constitutional constraints on government are much less onerous when it acts as employer as compared to acting as sovereign.
Id.
at 2151. Finally, the Court recognized that, in the employment context, an uncabined class-of-one theory risks making a constitutional case out of every decision by a government employer.
Id.
at 2156 (citing
Connick v. Myers,
The lesson we take from this is that context matters. Our task is to apply the
Engquist
approach to claims that the police have inflicted unequal treatment on a citizen for no reason other than malice. In this setting, we conclude, it is not possible to dismiss a complaint based on broad generalities. Although the police enjoy broad freedom of action,
Hilton,
In addition to their direct argument based on
Engquist,
the officers point to two circuit court decisions in support of their position. First, the Eighth Circuit has held that a class-of-one claim cannot be made against police based on their decisions about whom and how to investigate, because of the discretion inherent in those decisions.
Flowers v. City of Minneapolis,
The officers also rely on our application of
Engquist
to prosecutorial discretion in
Moore,
where we explained that “the discretion conferred on prosecutors in choosing whom and how to prosecute is flatly inconsistent with a presumption of uniform treatment.”
Moore,
Engquist
does show that some discretionary police decision-making is off-limits from class-of-one claims. One example comes from the Supreme Court’s own opinion, which discusses the traffic cop who has no way to distinguish among many speeding drivers.
Engquist,
B
We must therefore reach the officers’ alternative argument, which is that even if we do not revisit
Hilton,
they are entitled to qualified immunity because the right to police protection uncorrupted by personal animus was not clearly established at the time of the alleged conduct. In support of that point, they note again that there has been some indecision in this circuit over whether there is an animus requirement. See
Moore,
The officers’ remaining arguments that the right was not clearly established rest on other cases on which they might have relied, but none of those decisions affects the clarity of the law established in
Hilton.
First, the officers point to
Whren v. United States,
We therefore Affirm the judgment of the district court.
