James Boyd filed an action in the district court alleging that the Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS) child welfare investigator Leslie Foott and her supervisor Mickey Owen violated his rights to due process in their investigation of a claim of child abuse and their finding that the claim against him for physical abuse of a child was “indicated.” Foott and Owen filed a motion for summary judgment, arguing that they were entitled to qualified immunity on thе claim. The district court denied that motion, and they appeal that denial to this court.
We generally lack jurisdiction to review denials of summary judgment, but under the collateral order doctrine, a denial of summary judgment on the issue of qualified immunity is immediately appeal-able to the extent that it presents questions of law rather than fact.
Via v. LaGrand,
On December 30, 2002, DCFS received a hotline report that James Boyd, a police officer with the City of Washington Park, had physically abused the five-year-old daughter of Angela Hampt, a woman with whom he was acquainted. Mary Free, who worked for a crisis center, had received a call from Danny Knight, which alleged that Boyd had caused bruises to the buttocks of Sarah, the daughter of Angela Hampt, and that Boyd also had held a knife to Hampt’s throat and that Hampt was afraid of Boyd. Free then conveyed those allegations tо DCFS. Knight was a friend of Hampt who lived nearby and had been one of Sarah’s babysitters.
Foott was a DCFS child welfare investigator who investigated the allegation, and Owen supervised and participated in the investigation. Upon receiving such an allegation of abuse, DCFS investigators conduct an initial investigation to determine whether credible evidence of child neglect or abuse exists. Credible evidencе is established where the available facts, viewed in light of the surrounding circumstances, would cause a reasonable person to believe that a child was abused or neglected.
Dupuy v. Samuels,
On January 2, 2003, in the early afternoon, Owen and Foott proceeded to Hampt’s apartment to investigate. When there was no response at the apartment, they went to Knight’s house down the street and talked with him. They then called the Granite City police who accom *523 panied them to Hampt’s apartment. At this time, Hampt answered the door. Hampt allowed Owen and Foott to examine Sarah and they observed the bruises. Hampt asked Sarah how she got the bruises, and Sarah responded “James.” Hampt denied that (James) Boyd caused it, and suggested a number of other names of possible perpetrators. At that time, Owen decided to take Sarah into protective custody. On the ride to the field office, Foott asked Sarah in the car who caused the bruises, and she again identified Boyd. During that car ride, Foott and Owen decided that they would “indicate” Boyd for the bruising of Sarah’s buttocks. Foott contactеd Free again, and Free stated that Boyd was potentially dangerous, violent and psychotic. Later on January 2nd, Foott also interviewed another of Sarah’s babysitters, but although the report of that conversation mentions bruising observed on Sarah, it does not identify who caused it. There is some dispute as to when Boyd was contacted, but we assume for this appeal that Foott did not speak with Boyd until February 2003, after he had been indicated for abuse.
In August 2003, Boyd was hired by the Maryville Police Department in a part-time position, with the possibility of being considered for a full-time position in the future. As part of the hiring process, he agreed to a background check. The Mary-ville Chief of Police later called Boyd into his office and asked him who Angela Hampt was. The Chief indicated that he had learned that Boyd had been indicated for physical abuse, and had been investigated for allegations of sexual abuse (which were subsequently determined to be unfounded.) The Chief further stated that he did not want an officer with a pending or indicated report working for his department. Given the choice of resigning or being terminated, Boyd chose the former. Boyd subsequently filed this lawsuit alleging that the violation of his due process rights by the defеndants resulted in the indicated finding, and the loss of his ability to pursue his chosen occupation of law enforcement.
Owen and Foott sought summary judgment on the ground that they were protected from suit by the doctrine of qualified immunity. Under that doctrine, they are shielded from suit unless Boyd can demonstrate (1) the violation of a constitutional right that is (2) clearly established at the time of the alleged violation, so that a reаsonable public official would have known that his or her conduct was unlawful.
Green v. Butler,
The district court appears to have conflated the two prongs of the qualified immunity test. The court held that Boyd possessed a protected liberty interest in his employment as a police officer. The court then recognized that our decision in Dupuy could not clearly establish any due process violation because it was issued after the events at issue in the case. The court nevertheless held that Foott and Owen violated Boyd’s clearly established constitutional right to due process because “DCFS’ own rules and regulations imposed a duty to identify other possible explanations for the abuse,” and Owen and Foott failed to do so. Dist. Ct. Order at 5.
*524
The district court properly held that our
Dupuy
decision could not demonstrate a clearly established right because it did not exist when these events occurred, but its alternative reasoning is erroneous. Thе Supreme Court has made clear the requirement of due process is not defined by state rules and regulations, but is an independent determination.
Cleveland Bd. Of Educ. v. Loudermill,
As we will see, Boyd provides nothing further to demonstrate that the right was clearly established. We cannot jump to that issue, however, because the Supreme Court has made clear that we must first consider whether there was a violation of a constitutional right before we can consider whether that right was clearly established at the time of the violation.
Saucier v. Katz,
Boyd argues that he possessed a liberty interest in his employment as a police officer, and that the indicated finding deprived him of that interest without due process. Owen and Foott argue on appeal that Boyd does not in fact possess a liberty interest that was implicated by the indicated finding, and therefore that the Due Process Clause does not apply. “ ‘It is well-settled that an individual has no cognizable liberty interest in his reputation.’ ”
Dupuy,
The next question, then, is whether the procedures used in investigating the charge and issuing the indicated finding were constitutionally sufficient. Due prоcess is a flexible concept, and the procedures that are constitutionally required are dependent upon the particular situation, and are determined through application of the
Mathews
test.
Mathews v. Eldridge,
[f]irst, the private interest that will be affected by the official action; second, the risk of an erroneous deprivation of such interest through the procedures used and the probable value, if any, of additional or substitute procedural safeguards; and finally, the Government’s interest, including the function involved and the fiscal and administrative burdens that the additional or substitute procedural requirement would entail.
Mathews, id.
We note initially that Boyd misapplies this test. After first noting that the private interest in employment is a substantial one, Boyd turns to the second prong. Rather than considering the procedures actually followеd by the investigators here, as the Mathews test instructs, Boyd focuses exclusively on the DCFS procedures that the investigators should have followed. Because the procedures set forth by the DCFS regulations would have satisfied Boyd’s due process concerns, Boyd concludes that there is no risk of erroneous deprivation of his interest under the procedures set forth by Illinois regulations. That misconstrues the test. The issue is whether the procedures actually followed presented an unreasonable risk of an erroneous deprivation of the private interest, in light of the government’s interest and the probable value of additional safeguards. The focus is not on whether the defendants would have complied with due process had they adhered more faithfully to the state regulations, but whether their actual conduct in this case was сonstitutionally deficient.
We do not consider this issue on a blank slate, as this court has considered the
Mathews
factors in the context of the DCFS procedures for indicating abuse. Specifically, this court in
Dupuy
discussed at length the credible evidence standard, under which such an indicated finding is made.
Dupuy,
*526 That is the essence of the complaint in this case as well. Boyd аrgues that the investigation was poorly developed and that exculpatory evidence either was not obtained or was ignored. That deficiency underlies all of his complaints in this case. In Dupuy, we were presented with a scenario in which an indicated finding would result in the immediate termination of employment, because the employee was in the child care profession. Id. at 497, 499, 503. Accordingly, the рrivate interest at stake was even more substantial than here, because indicated findings are not automatically transmitted to law enforcement employers as they are to child care employers. We agreed with the district court that in that context, the investigators determining whether credible evidence existed to indicate abuse must consider equally exculpatory and inculpatory еvidence in order to comport with due process. Id. at 504-06. Although not dis-positive of this case, because the interest at stake was potentially greater in Dupuy, this decision provides strong support for a determination that the procedures used in this ease were constitutionally inadequate. The indicated finding had an impact on Boyd’s liberty interest in his employment by arguably leading to his termination in this case, as there was some evidence in the record that an indicated finding would operate as a bar to all law enforcement employment (and, as explained above, any argument to the contrary was not presented to the district court). Yet, the investigators initially decided to indicate Boyd for abuse the night they examined Sarah, and based that indication almost entirely on her statement that Boyd was responsible for the bruising. That is not to say that the investigators could not have constitutionally reached that conclusion. The initial hotline report had identified Boyd as the perpetrator and identified the locale of the bruising, and the physical evidence corroborated that claim. Sarah then identified Boyd, which again was consistent with the hotline report and with the subsequent interview of Knight. But, the investigatоrs did not attempt to develop or consider alternate explanations. They failed to consider past records documenting abuse of Sarah by others, or her psychiatric condition, and failed to provide Boyd with an opportunity to respond prior to the indicated finding. That focus solely on inculpatory evidence, to the exclusion of exculpatory evidence, fails to cоmport with the requirements of due process, and accordingly Boyd has demonstrated that the actions presented a constitutional violation.
That does not end the inquiry, however, because qualified immunity nevertheless protects the defendants unless the constitutional right that was violated was clearly established. A plaintiff can establish that a right was clearly established by
presenting case law that “has bоth articulated the right at issue and applied it to a factual circumstance similar to the one at hand.” ... [T]hese decisions must demonstrate that, at the time the defendants acted, it was certain that their conduct violated the law.... “This is not to say that an official action is protected by qualified immunity unless the very action in question has previously been held unlawful; but it is to say that in the light of pre-existing law the unlawfulness must be apparent.”
Doyle v. Camelot Care Centers, Inc.,
The plaintiff has the burden of establishing that the constitutional right was clearly established.
Nanda,
In this court, Boyd cites only to
Jones v. Wilhelm,
