OPINION ON REHEARING
Plaintiff-Appellant Joe Alfred Izen, Jr., a Texas attorney, appeals the district court’s order granting summary judgment in favor of IRS agents Terrance Catalina and James Climer. Izen’s
Bivens
action
*365
alleges that Catalina and Climer engaged in malicious prosecution and retaliation in violation of the Fourth and First Amendments, respectively, when they invеstigated and prosecuted him for money laundering. The district court, acting on remand from this court in
Izen v. Catalina,
I.
Izen is a tax attorney. He has long represented tax protestors and other defendants in criminal tax cases. In August 1989, IRS agent Catalina received a referral from the Waco, Tеxas, IRS collection office alleging that Izen had not filed.income tax returns for tax years 1986, 1987, and 1988. The referral contained allegations from a third party informant that Izen was involved in money laundering, including allegations that Izen was involved in the failure of a private bank and had accounts in foreign countries. Catalina sоon deemed the informant unreliable. Izen alleges the informant was Michael J.B. Easton, who had an indictment pending against him at the time and, according to Izen, aided Izen’s ex-wife in surreptitiously withdrawing a large sum of money from an account of Izen’s.
In October 1989, Catalina accepted the referral for investigation of thе charge of failure to file tax returns. He determined there was insufficient basis to investigate Izen for money laundering, but recommended opening a criminal income tax investigation for the years 1986 through 1988 based on the missing returns. Catalina also recommended including 1985 in the investigation, though a return had been filed. Catalina’s tax investigation was soon derailed by the fact that Izen ultimately filed his 1986 return in September 1989, and filed his 1987 and 1988 returns in April 1990, even receiving refunds approved by Catalina.
Although Catalina dropped the income tax investigation, he then embarked on a money laundering investigation. Izen alleges that the impetus for the investigation was a desire to rеtaliate against him for his history of association with tax protestors, his representation of criminal tax defendants, and his representation of taxpayers utilizing foreign trusts to reduce their federal income tax.
See, e.g., United States v. Dahlstrom,
Upon reviewing the reports concerning Izen’s client, Catalina, with the permission of his superiors, commenced an undercover *366 investigation of Izen himself which lasted from 1990 to 1992. Climer was the undercover agent assigned to the investigation. Climer posed as a сlient seeking to create a foreign trust in which to deposit proceeds from the sale of purportedly stolen oil. Numerous conversations between Izen and Climer were apparently taped, though the agents have not placed any of the recordings in the record. 1 Catalina testified before a grand jury in May 1995, and it returned a four-count indictment of Izen for conspiracy to commit money laundering and aiding or abetting or attempting money laundering. Izen alleges that the indictment was secured in part due to alleged misrepresentations made by Catalina to the grand jury. 2 In May 1996, for undisclosed reasons, the United States moved to withdraw the presentment of the indictment and all criminal charges against Izen were dismissed.
Izen brought suit in 1997, alleging various constitutional and non-constitutional torts. The district court dismissed all of Izen’s claims. Izen appealed the dismissal of his Fourth Amendment malicious prosecution claim, his First Amendment retaliation claim, his Fifth Amendment claim, the deniаl of his motion for disclosure of grand jury materials, and the grant of summary judgment in favor of the agents based on their qualified immunity defense.
In Izen I we reversed the dismissal of the malicious prosecution and retaliation claims, holding that the district court had misconstrued the applicable law on both. In addition, we held that a genuine issue of material fact existed as to whether Izen was investigated and prosecuted in retaliation for representing criminal tax defendants. We affirmed the dismissal of Izen’s Fifth Amendment claim as well as the denial of his motion for disclosure.
On remand, Izen filed a second amended complaint in which he added a Federal Tort Claims Act cause of action against the United States. The district court again granted summary judgment in favor of the agents and United States on all claims. Izen appeals the grant of summary judgment on his malicious prosecution claim, his retaliation claim, and his Federal Tort Claims Act cause of action.
II.
This court reviews a grant of summary judgment
de novo. Chriceol v. Phillips,
A. Malicious Prosecution
We affirm the district court’s order granting summary judgment on Izen’s claim of malicious prosecution, though on different grounds. In this circuit, plaintiffs no longer allege a constitutional violation by satisfying the state law elements of malicious prosecution alone.
Castellano v. Fragozo,
B. Federal Tort Claims Act
Izen’s second amended complaint alleges claims under the Federal Tort Claims Act based on the state torts of malicious prosecution, false arrest, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and negligence. The district court held that each of these claims failed for lack of exhaustion under 28 U.S.C. § 2675. Section 2675 provides that a would-be plaintiff must first present his claim to the appropriate federal agency. While Izen did so, the district court held that the scope of the claims stated in his second amended complaint went far beyond his administrative complaint. Because Izen has not contested this holding, we affirm.
C. First Amendment Retaliation
The Retaliation Standard
Izen alleges that Catalina launched the sting operation and prosecuted him in retaliation for his history of representing criminal tax defendants. “[T]he First Amendment prohibits not only direct limitations on speech but also adverse government action against an individual because of her exercise of First Amendment freedoms.”
Colson v. Grohman,
In the criminal prosecution context, plaintiffs must establish three elements in order to make out a retaliation claim.
Keenan v. Tejeda,
The district court applied the
Johnson
standard and granted summary judgment on behalf of the agents, reasoning in part that Izen had not еstablished the common law elements of malicious prosecution.
Izen v. Catalina,
In 1989, the IRS learned the following about Izen from the informant: (1) Izen was personally involved in the failure of the Chilton Private Bank in Chilton, Texas; (2) Izen was closely tied to Robert Chappell, the founder of NLIC, a tax shelter operating out of the Bahamas; (3) Izen engineered large transfers of money from Chilton Private Bank to offshore banks before the Chilton Private Bank failed; and (4) Izen had deposited $4-5 million dollars in the Isle of Man. R. 798. Additionally, the IRS learned the Izen had a great deal of knowledge about offshore banking and the working of NLIC, and he had a “close personal relationship” with Robert Chappell. R. 797. This information, coupled with Izen’s failure to file tax returns for the years 1986, 1987, and 1988, led Catalina to conclude that opening a criminal investigation into Izen’s affairs was warranted. The Chief Criminal In *369 vestigation officer approved this investigation. No charges were filed at this time.
Initial inquiries, including a deposition given by Izen, indicated irregularities with Izen’s financial transactions for the 1985 tax year (in which he did filе a tax return). Catalina, however, concedes that he was not aware that Izen eventually filed tax returns for the missing years. The returns were filed in September of 1989, after the investigation was officially opened. In any event, after Catalina’s initial review of the documents indicated suspicious activity, and in light of the proсedural benefits (mainly the ability to enforce summonses) afforded by a grand jury, Catalina requested a grand jury investigation. 8 The Department of Justice approved this request. Catalina thought an undercover operation would assist in the case. Catalina’s supervisor approved the operation. In early 1990, Catalina began to corroborate some of the information provided by the initial informant. Catalina learned independently that: (1) Izen had been representing NLIC since 1983; (2) the president and founder of NLIC, Robert Chappell, was a fugitive from a mail fraud conviction; (3) Chappell and his organization attracted numerous “anti-govеrnment” individuals; (4) several fugitives were apparently living and working with Chappell in the Bahamas; (5) two of the fugitives, both of whom were considered armed and dangerous, fled the country on tax charges, and were believed to be in charge of NLIC’s foreign operations; (6) another NLIC executive was a fugitive on state income tаx evasion charges in California; (7) NLIC -used Chilton Private Bank in Chilton, Texas for some transactions; and (8) there had been over one hundred, cases and thirty-one convictions numbered on taxpayers involved with NLIC. R. 791, Catalina verified an employment contract between Izen and NLIC, and that two Houston residents used Izen’s office address for their Cayman Island bank accounts. Furthermore, Catalina learned that Izen: (1) attempted to establish offshore banks on numerous occasions; (2) visited several tax haven countries; (3) agreed to set up a foreign trust; (4) had a bank account in the Bahamas that he did not declare in his 1985 tax return.
Additionally, the undercover оperation gleaned more information about potential money laundering. For example, one suspect explained that Chilton Private Bank could be used to, launder money. When, acting undercover, Climer contacted Izen and asked him to set up an offshore trust, he offered to' do so. Izen also helpеd Climer launder the money by establishing offshore accounts and foreign trusts, "and using tax haven country banks.' Izen violated domestic tax law through these actions. Izen also disobeyed other American law requirements, such as failing to file a Form 8300 after receiving a-$15,000 cash payment from Climer.
All of this evidence, taken in its entirety, demonstrаtes probable cause as a matter of law. By the time the government presented information to the grand jury, it had significant, independently verifiable information that Izen was in fact guilty of money laundering. Even assuming ar-guendo that Izen could create a triable issue of fact as to the remaining elements of the retaliatоry prosecution claim, because he is unable to create a triable issue of fact as to whether probable cause exist *370 ed when he was indicted, the district court thus properly granted summary judgment to Catalina on the retaliation claim. 9
III.
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s order granting summary judgment tо the defendants as to all claims.
Notes
. Izen placed in the record those portions of the recordings which he argues are exculpatory-
. Only a small fraction of Catalina's grand jury testimony is in the record. Because of Izen’s allegations, the district court did not rely on the indictment.
. Though the claim in
Castellano
was brought under § 1983 while Izen invokes
Bivens,
we have held that the constitutional torts аuthorized by each are coextensive.
Evans v. Ball,
. Further, the record does not support a claim directly under the Fourth Amendment, rendering remand fruitless.
.
See also Smith v. Plati,
. To this end, Izen's assertion that
Wilson v. Thompson,
. This standard, which we share with the Second, Third, Eighth, and Eleventh Circuits, differs from that used in the Sixth, Seventh, Tenth, and D.C. Circuits.
See Moore
v.
Hartman,
. This use of a grand jury for investigative purposes is distinguished from a prosecutor's use of a grand jury to seek an indictment. See generally Sara Sun Beale et al., Grand Jury Law and Practice § 1.7 (2d ed.1997). Catalina was not required to "have probable cause to indict Izen when he requested the grand jury investigation.
. We therefore need not reach the qualified immunity issue raised by Catalina.
