Jeffrey Reed appeals the district court’s dismissal of his 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action against the City of Chicago and various Chicago Police officers (“detectives”). Reed sued the City and the detectives for his allegedly unlawful confinement for approximately 23 months prior to his acquittal of first degree murder. His four count-complaint proposed a variety of legal theories supporting liability. The district court rejected all of them and dismissed the complaint pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). We affirm.
I
Although the legal issues in this case are somewhat confusing, the facts as alleged in Reed’s complaint are not. In early June 1991, defendants Griffin, Murphy, Kroll, Christophersen, Stehlik, Turner, and Green began investigating a recent killing. On June 12, 1991, the detectives went to the home of the prime suspect, Garvin Bryant. Bryant denied his own guilt but fingered Reed as the killer. Another person at Bryant’s home corroborated this information. Without further investigation, and without an arrest or search warrant, detectives Turner, Kroll, and Murphy went to Reed’s home and placed him under arrest for first degree murder. Shortly thereafter, a grand jury indicted Reed for murder based solely on the detectives’ testimony and statements. Unable to post bond, Reed remained incarcerated for approximately 23 months while the case was pending. During that time, Reed filed a motion to quash the indictment. Detectives Turner, Kroll, and Murphy testified at the hearing on the motion to quash. The trial court denied the motion, finding that the detectives had probable cause to arrest Reed based on the statements they received at Bryant’s home. On May 5, 1993, the court acquitted Reed in a bench trial.
As discussed below, this case would be much simpler if Reed had filed a timely (by June 12, 1993) wrongful arrest lawsuit against the detectives. Instead, Reed filed his four-count complaint in federal court on May 4, 1994. 1 Count I alleged a Fourth Amendment violation in that the detectives deprived Reed of his right to be free from unlawful arrest, unreasonable search and seizure, wrongful confinement and detention, and malicious prosecution. Count II, also against the detectives, charged that Reed’s post-arrest confinement was oppressive and “shocking to the conscience” in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment. Count III alleged a pendent state law malicious prosecution claim against the City and the detectives. Count IV alleged that the City and the detectives had negligently violated a special duty owed to Reed.
All defendants moved to dismiss Reed’s complaint pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6). The district court granted the motion in all respects. It found that Reed’s unlawful ar *1051 rest, search and seizure claims were barred by the two year statute of limitations. More significantly for this appeal, the district court found that neither the Fourth nor the Fourteenth Amendment supportéd Reed’s malicious prosecution and unlawful confinement claims. Finally, the district court declined supplemental jurisdiction over the state law malicious prosecution claim.
Although Reed proffered a number of legal theories supporting liability in the district court, his appeal addresses only his malicious prosecution and unlawful confinement claims against the detectives. The unlawful confinement claim is essentially identical to his malicious prosecution claim, and, as discussed below, fails for the same reason. For simplicity’s sake, we will address them together under the label of malicious prosecution.
II
We review de novo the dismissal of Reed’s complaint.
Starnes v. Capital Cities Media, Inc.,
To state a claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, a plaintiff must allege that: (1) the defendant deprived the plaintiff of a right secured by the Constitution and laws of the United States, and (2) the defendant acted under color of state law.
Starnes,
Ill
At bottom Reed’s complaint is that he was arrested and detained for 23 months without probable cause. However, his case was complicated from the start because he failed to file his claim for wrongful arrest or detention within two years of his arrest, and thus that claim was timebarred.
Gosnell v. City of Troy, III.,
We have had several occasions within the last few years to address claims for malicious prosecutions brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. See, e.g.,
Smart,
The reasoning behind the first and third steps of this analysis is unimportant for this case. We based our conclusion that the Fourth Amendment did not apply between arrest and conviction on the fact that the “seizure” of an arrestee ends after the
Ger-stein
hearing.
2
Wilkins,
However, in
Albright v. Oliver,
Chief Justice Rehnquist, writing for a plurality, held that the Due Process Clause does not support a claim for malicious prosecution. - U.S. at-,
After
Albright,
one might have thought that our tripartite analysis enunciated in
Wilkins
and
Titran
would not have survived. However, in
Garcia,
Approximately three months later, this court again addressed
Albright.
In
Smart,
If malicious prosecution or abuse of process is committed by state actors and results in the arrest or other seizure of the defendant, there is an infringement of liberty, but we now know that the defendant’s only constitutional remedy is under the Fourth Amendment (as made applicable to the states by the Fourteenth), and not under the due process clause directly. Albright v. Oliver, - U.S.-,114 S.Ct. 807 ,127 L.Ed.2d 114 (1994).
Smart did not cite Garcia and did not analyze further whether the “other seizure” could be the proverbial “continuing seizure.” This would be problematic because malicious prosecution often will include post-Gerstein hearing conduct.
Here, the district court reconciled
Garcia
and
Smart
by finding that
Smart
and the Fourth Amendment were no help to Reed because his seizure ended after his probable cause hearing. The district
court
concluded that because
“Garcia
holds that substantive due process governs after a
Gerstein
hearing
*1053
and [because]
Albright
holds that a claim of malicious prosecution cannot be based on substantive due process, this Court must dismiss Plaintiffs malicious prosecution claim.” We acknowledge that the district court’s reading of each of these cases in the abstract seems correct. However, reading them in context suggests that the district court’s analysis is incorrect because it implies that
Garcia
held that there is no remedy for a
post-Gerstein
hearing malicious prosecution claim. However, this results in the same “gap in constitutional protection” that we sought to eliminate in
Wilkins
via the tripartite analysis.
4
We now have reached the edge of the same precipice upon which the Second Circuit recently found itself. And, as Judge Calabresi wrote for that court, “tempted as we are to clarify the law in this area in the wake of the many questions left unanswered by the Supreme Court in
Albright,
we nonetheless conclude that this is not the case in which to struggle with
Albright." Pinaud v. County of Suffolk,
Let’s examine carefully the factual allegations in Reed’s complaint. In particular, what is it that Reed alleges the defendants did? First, that his arrest and charge of murder were “without probable cause.” Next, “the basis for Plaintiffs subsequent continued incarceration [after the state court found probable cause at the Gerstein hearing] was without probable cause.” Then, that “plaintiff was subsequently indicted for murder solely on the basis of the [detectives’] testimony and statements.” Finally, certain of the detectives “testified at the hearing to quash the arrest.”
So what do we have? At bottom, we have an allegation that the defendants lacked probable cause to arrest Reed and charge him with murder. That is a claim for wrongful arrest. As Reed concedes in his brief, this claim is timebarred. All that is left apart from that claim is the detectives’ testimony before the grand jury and at the hearing on the motion to quash. Reed did not allege that the detectives gave perjured testimony at these hearings, merely that they “testified.” In fact, Reed made no allegations in the complaint that the detectives falsified any information or evidence. He did not allege that they discovered exculpatory evidence but withheld it from him. In sum, there were no allegations that the detectives committed any improper acts after arresting Reed without probable cause. We fail to see how this is malicious prosecution. 5
In her concurrence in
Albright,
Justice Ginsburg noted that a malicious prosecution action against police officers is “anomalous.” — U.S. at-n. 5,
IV
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court’s dismissal of Reed’s complaint. 6
Affirmed.
Notes
. Reed filed an amended complaint on August 10, 1994.
.
Gerstein v. Pugh,
. Although the concept of a "continuing seizure” is intriguing, see, e.g., Albright, - U.S. at- -,
. This situation is not as unjust as Reed's counsel suggested at oral argument. After all, at one point, Reed had an entirely viable wrongful arrest claim against the detectives. The fact that this claim is now time-barred docs not mean that Reed must be afforded another remedy.
. The defendants, citing
Briscoe v. LaHue,
. Rccd also has filed a motion to strike the Ap-pellees’ Supplemental Appendix because it contains documents that were not part of the district court 'record. The Appellees acknowledge that the appendix materials were not before the district court, but argue that we should take judicial notice of the materials in the appendix which are records from the state court proceedings involving Reed. However, given our scope of review in this appeal, the state court records are irrelevant so we grant Reed’s motion to strike the supplemental appendix.
Sports Center, Inc. v. Brunswick Marine,
