Shortly before pleading guilty to conspiracy to distribute heroin, Kadiri Apampa brought this civil suit against two assistant U.S. attorneys and a DEA agent who had been involved in his prosecution. Apampa’s complaint, prepared without legal assistance, claims that the defendants made false statements about him in applications (which were granted) for permission to tap his phone conversations. The particular statement of which he complains, which he calls not only false but libelous, is that a “U.S. Customs source of information alleged that ... Apam-pa acted as a controller of white female heroin couriers.” He also complains about a press conference “orchestrated” by the Department of Justice in which his arrest and that of his coconspirators was announced and he was described as an “international heroin supplier.” The complaint seeks $50 million in damages. No statutory or common law basis for the suit is mentioned, but the government moved to dismiss the complaint on the ground that it was really a suit under the Federal Tort Claims Act and Apampa had failed to comply with the requirement of making an administrative claim as a precondition to suing. The district judge agreed and dismissed the suit with prejudice, ignoring Apampa’s contention in his response to the motion to dismiss that he was not suing under the Tort Claims Act; that he was bringing a Bivens suit and complaining of a violation of the federal wiretapping statute (Title III).
The judge was clearly right insofar as the complaint charges defamation. The Westfall Act makes a suit against the United States under the Federal Tort Claims Act the exclusive remedy for most nonconstitu-tional torts by employees of the federal government. 28 U.S.C. § 2679(b)(1);
Sullivan v. United States,
Title III creates a remedy—and like the
Bivens
remedy one not supplanted by the Tort Claims Act, which by its terms does not furnish the exclusive remedy “for a violation of a statute of the United States under which [a civil] action against an individual is otherwise authorized,” 28 U.S.C. § 2679(b)(2)(B)—against persons who intercept or disclose telephone and other electronic communications in violation of Title III. 18 U.S.C. § 2520(a);
Gelbard v. United States,
And nothing in the statute prevents a defendant lawfully convicted on the basis of wiretapping evidence from seeking this remedy, although relief will sometimes be blocked by the principle of
Heck v. Humphrey,
The problem is that Apampa’s complaint, insofar as it can be thought to be charging a violation of Title III at all, is directed at the defendants’ calling him an “international heroin supplier” at a press conference. He does not claim that this statement was part of any electronic communication to which he was a party, and he can’t complain about references to him in wiretapped conversations to which he was not a party. 18 U.S.C. § 2520(a). Clearly the statement about the white female heroin couriers, made in the defendants’ application for permission to tap Apampa’s phone conversations, was not a fruit of the wiretapping.
It might be possible to infer that the same defendants who he claims lied in the application were behind the disclosures at the press conference. Even so, the implication would be that the defendants were out to get him, not that they used what they overheard in the wiretapped conversations to defame him at the press conference. The latter is, however, a possible reading, and perhaps, if so read, the complaint stated a claim.
Haines v. Kerner,
*1106
That we need not decide, as we believe that Title III does not forbid the government to make public disclosure of criminal charges even if the charges include information obtained from wiretapping,
Smith v. SEC,
The specific charge against Apampa was that he supplied heroin from Nigeria to the United States, and if true that made him an international heroin supplier. The charge was contained in a public indictment, and the government was entitled to announce the indictment publicly.
Aversa v. United States, supra,
AFFIRMED.
