This is а suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against 28 federal, state, and local law enforcement officers, who are alleged to have conspired to deprive the plaintiff of his civil rights in retaliation for his reporting the defendants’ misconduct to their superiors and insisting that the defendants investigate drug offenses which he claims tо have discovered while working as a confidential informant. Among the retaliatory acts that the defendants are alleged to have committed was inducing a woman to accuse the plaintiff of stalking her and to obtain an injunction against him and then to accuse him of violating it, which led, he contends, to his being prosecuted and convicted for criminal contempt and related offenses. He served a brief term in jail and afterwards, while оn probation, was falsely accused of disorderly conduct. Fearing that his probation would be revoked and that he would be recommitted to jаil and there murdered either by the defendants or by drug criminals whom the plaintiff had brought to justice during his time as a confidential informant — and from whose wrath the defendants, of course, refuse to protect him — the plaintiff fled Wisconsin and became, and remains, a fugitive from justice with two arrest warrants outstanding agаinst him, one for disorderly conduct and the other for violating the terms of his probation. See
Appleyard v. Massachusetts,
The district court dismissed the complaint on a variety of grounds. One ground that the defendants pressed but the district judge did not rule on and that the defendants renew in this court is that the suit is barred by the “fugitive disentitlement” doctrine; the plaintiff was a fugitive when he filed the complaint and remains so. Believing that the doctrine bars the suit (including the appeal), after oral argument we ordered the appeal dismissed with directions that the district judge vacate his order dismissing the suit on the merits and dismiss it as barred by the doctrine. We said that an opinion explaining our reasoning would follow, and this is that opinion.
The fugitive disentitlement doctrine, as restated by the Supreme Court in
Degen v. United States,
Degen
as we read it shifts the emphasis from considerations of dignity, deterrence, respect, propriety, and symmetry found in a number of earlier cases (compare
Degen,
The risk of abuse of process is particularly great in the present case given the number of defendants and the more than likelihood that the suit is completely frivolous, arid not only because of the fantastic character of the allegations, which we have stated only in the most abbreviated form, omitting the garish details including alleged incessant attempts on the plaintiffs life by or with the connivance of the defendants. Many of thе plaintiffs claims are barred by the
Heck
doctrine, because if sound they imply the invalidity of the plaintiffs conviction for contempt,
Heck v. Humphrey,
Against all this his lawyer argues that if we invoke the fugitive disentitlement doctrine we are asking his client to choosе between his life and his lawsuit. In effect though not in words the lawyer is invoking the defense of duress or necessity, which can sometimes be invoked by escaped prisoners arguing that they had to escape in order to save their life from fellow prisoners against whom the prison authorities refused to protect them.
United States v. Bailey,
The appeal is dismissed on the basis of the fugitive-disentitlement doctrine, and the district court is directed to vacate its judgment and dismiss the suit on the basis of the doctrine.
