Joseph LOCURTO, Jonathan Walters, and Robert Steiner, Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
Rudolph GIULIANI, Mayor of the City of New York, Howard Safir, Commissioner of the New York City Police Department, The City of New York, and Thomas Von Essen, Commissioner of the New York City Fire Department, Defendants-Appellants.
Docket No. 04-6480-CV(L).
Docket No. 04-6498-CV(CON).
Docket No. 04-6499-CV(CON).
United States Court of Appeals, Second Circuit.
Argued: December 16, 2005.
Decided: April 27, 2006.
COPYRIGHT MATERIAL OMITTED COPYRIGHT MATERIAL OMITTED Christopher Dunn (Arthur Eisenberg, of counsel), New York Civil Liberties Union, New York, N.Y., for Plaintiff-Appellee Joseph Locurto.
Michael N. Block, Sullivan Papain Block McGrath & Cannavo, P.C., New York, N.Y., for Plaintiff-Appellee Jonathan Walters.
Robert Didio, Kew Gardens, N.Y., for Plaintiff-Appellee Robert Steiner.
Elizabeth I. Freedman, Assistant Corporation Counsel (Francis F. Caputo, Jonathan Pines, and Michael A. Cardozo, Corporation Counsel of the City of New York, of counsel), New York, N.Y., for Defendants-Appellants.
Mitchell A. Karlan (David L. Kerstein, Farrah L. Pepper, and Matthew S. Kahn, of counsel), Gibson Dunn & Crutcher LLP, New York, N.Y., for Amici Curiae The Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law (John C. Brittain, Michael L. Foreman, and Nicole J. DeSario, Washington, D.C., of counsel), The National Black Police Association, The National Association of Black Law Enforcement Officers, The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (Angela Ciccolo and Victor Goode, of counsel), The International Association of Black Professional Fire Fighters, and The National Asian Pacific American Legal Consortium (Vincent Eng, of counsel).
Before: OAKES, CALABRESI, and WESLEY, Circuit Judges.
CALABRESI, Circuit Judge.
The Government as employer bears a special burden. Absent contrary legislation, a private employer may regulate the workplace environment, and hire, fire, and promote as it pleases. The Government enjoys no such freedom. As the Supreme Court has said, "the state and federal governments, even in the exercise of their internal operations, do not constitutionally have the complete freedom of action enjoyed by a private employer." Cafeteria & Rest. Workers Union, Local 473 v. McElroy,
At the same time, the Supreme Court has recognized, in a variety of doctrinal contexts, that "the status of the Government as a . . . market participant must be sharply distinguished from the status of the Government as regulator or administrator." Dir., Office of Workers' Comp. Programs v. Newport News Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Co.,
The plaintiffs — former New York Police Department ("NYPD") officer Joseph Locurto and former New York Fire Department ("FDNY") firefighters Jonathan Walters and Robert Steiner — brought suit against the defendants — former New York City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani, former NYPD Commissioner Howard Safir, former FDNY Commissioner Thomas Von Essen, and the City of New York — claiming that they were illegally fired from their positions in the NYPD and the FDNY in retaliation for their participation in a Labor Day parade, on a float that featured mocking stereotypes of African-Americans. The district court entered judgment for the plaintiffs, holding that they were discharged, not on any legitimate grounds, such as the disruption or threat of disruption that their actions had caused to the operations of the police and fire departments, but in retaliation for the content of their speech, and hence in violation of the First and Fourteenth Amendments. Because we conclude that the defendants fired the plaintiffs out of a reasonable concern for disruption, and that this concern outweighed the plaintiffs' individual expressive interests, we reverse the district court, and remand the case to that court with instructions to enter judgment for the defendants.
Background
Each of the three plaintiffs is a white resident of Broad Channel, a small, predominantly white, island community in southeast Queens. Locurto, a Broad Channel native, was an NYPD officer from 1994 until his termination in October 1998. During that time, he was assigned to the racially-mixed 104th precinct in Queens and received consistently positive reviews from his supervisors there. Steiner, who has lived in Broad Channel since 1996, was an FDNY firefighter from 1996 until October 1998. At the time of his firing, Steiner was assigned to Ladder 17 in the South Bronx, a 98 percent minority community. There had never been any reported problems between Steiner and his colleagues or the public. Walters is a lifelong Broad Channel resident who joined the FDNY in 1990. For the three years leading up to his discharge in October 1998, he worked at Engine Company 231 in Brownsville, a predominantly African-American and Hispanic neighborhood in Brooklyn. All of Walters's performance evaluations during his FDNY tenure showed a rating of "satisfactory" or higher, and he had no reported difficulty with any of his fellow firefighters, four of whom were African-American.
The Float
Each year, Broad Channel plays host to a loosely organized Labor Day parade. The parade features, among other things, floats with varying themes and of varying degrees of sophistication. Local politicians award prizes to floats designated, for example, "prettiest," "most original," and "funniest." In each of the nine years leading up to 1998, the prize for funniest float was awarded to a particular group of individuals who entered floats that often, but not always, featured racial, ethnic, or other stereotypes, and that played off themes from popular culture. In 1994, for example, this group entered a float entitled "Hasidic Park," a play on the film Jurassic Park, that featured stereotypes of Hasidic Jews living in prehistoric times. The group's 1996 float, called "Gooks of Hazard," depicted Asian stereotypes. Another year, the float styled itself "Happy Gays" and made fun of gay men. Steiner and Walters participated in each of these floats, and Locurto in the 1996 and 1997 floats. There is no evidence that any of the previous floats generated any substantial contemporaneous controversy or public attention.
For the September 7, 1998 Labor Day parade, the group, which included the plaintiffs, decided to enter a float called "Black to the Future — Broad Channel 2098." The conceit, a play on the 1985 time-travel film Back to the Future, was to depict how Broad Channel would look in 2098 when, presumably, the community would be more integrated than it was in 1998. Each of the float participants, including the plaintiffs, covered their faces in black lipstick, donned Afro wigs, and accompanied the float along the procession in attire ranging from overalls with no T-shirt underneath, to cut-off jeans and ratty T-shirts, to athletic pants and sweatshirts. The float itself featured two buckets of Kentucky Fried Chicken on the hood of a flatbed truck. One of the participants (not a plaintiff in this case) ate a watermelon and at one point threw the remains into the crowd. The float participants engaged in various chants, including, "No Justice, No Peace," "This isn't Johannesburg," and "We didn't land on Broad Channel, Broad Channel landed on us."1 Plaintiffs Steiner and Walters yelled to the crowd, "Crackers, we're moving in," and Walters simulated "break dancing" alongside the float.
Near the end of the procession, and apparently without the others' knowledge, Walters held onto the truck's tailgate, pretending to be dragged by the truck, and yelled, "Look what they did to our brother in Texas, we would not allow them here. . . ." The scene was intended to invoke and parodically recreate the dragging death of James Byrd, Jr., an African-American man who had been murdered months earlier outside of Jasper, Texas after being chained to the back of a moving pickup truck by three white men.
The float never reached the viewing stand to be sized up for the annual funniest float prize because a thunderstorm ended the parade early.
Reaction to the Float
The next evening, a local news broadcast aired amateur video footage of the float in a piece entitled "Racist Float." Extensive press coverage followed immediately, with the New York Times reporting three days later on the front of its Metro section that, according to "city officials," New York City police officers and firefighters had taken part in the float. See David W. Chen, Officers and Firemen Wore Blackface on Float, Officials Say, N.Y. Times, Sept. 11, 1998, at B1. The paper quoted Mayor Giuliani as saying, in a statement, "`I've spoken to Commissioners Safir and Von Essen and we all agree that any police officer, firefighter or other city employee involved in this disgusting display of racism should be removed from positions of responsibility immediately. . . . They will be fired.'" Id.
On the afternoon of September 11, 1998, the day the Times story ran, Locurto learned that the NYPD wanted to speak to him about his participation in the float. He contacted the Department's Legal Bureau through an attorney and said that he had, in fact, participated; shortly thereafter, with no further inquiry into the nature of Locurto's involvement, the NYPD suspended him without pay. Also on September 11, Steiner and Walters appeared voluntarily before Von Essen to report their participation in the float. They, too, were subsequently suspended without pay. Von Essen told Steiner and Walters that, were it up to him, he would not fire them, but that his hands were tied.
More media attention followed. On Saturday, September 12, Rev. Al Sharpton led a group of demonstrators through the streets of Broad Channel. In a story appearing the same day, Giuliani was quoted as saying of the plaintiffs, "They're technically suspended, but they're never getting back into the Police Department or the Fire Department unless the Supreme Court of the United States ordered us to take them back." Gene Mustain, Float Firefighters Shelved, Daily News (N.Y.), Sept. 12, 1998, at 7. Giuliani was also quoted as saying, "Police officers [and] firefighters carry a very heavy responsibility. . . to treat people fairly. That responsibility cannot be placed in doubt." Id. (alterations in original). A New York Times story that ran the next day further quoted Giuliani as saying, "I'm not going to take the responsibility of keeping [Locurto] on the police force and then three years from now he hurts somebody and somebody wants to know why he wasn't removed." Kit R. Roane, "`Suspended Police Officer Apologizes, Calling Float `a Big Mistake,'" N.Y. Times, Sept. 13, 1998, at 51.
The plaintiffs' float and Giuliani's comments came in the immediate wake of a controversy over the NYPD's handling of the September 5, 1998 "Million Youth March." Giuliani had publicly denounced the march organizer, calling former Nation of Islam official Khalid Abdul Muhammad a "hatemonger" over comments, which Giuliani regarded as offensive, that Muhammad had made about Jews and Catholics. The City initially denied a permit to march organizers, but a permit issued after the organizers obtained a federal injunction. See Million Youth March, Inc. v. Safir,
Locurto's NYPD Hearing
The NYPD filed two charges against Locurto on September 14, 1998:(1) "conduct prejudicial to the good order, efficiency and discipline of the Department" by participating in a Labor Day parade float "which depicted African-Americans in a demeaning and offensive manner" ("Specification No. 1"), and (2) "knowingly associat[ing] with person(s) or organization(s) advocating hatred, or oppression of, or prejudice toward a racial or religious group" ("Specification No. 2"). Under NYPD administrative procedures, such charges must be adjudicated at a hearing before the Deputy Commissioner of Trials. The Deputy Commissioner then issues a Report and Recommendation to the Police Commissioner, who makes a final determination.
Locurto's hearing was held October 5, 1998, before Deputy Commissioner of Trials Rae Downes Koshetz. Locurto and the Department agreed to two stipulations of fact to be entered at the hearing: (1) that the NYPD had not terminated any officer solely for having engaged in racially offensive speech or expression since January 1991, and (2) that the NYPD had no knowledge of any case in which charges were filed against an officer for alleged violation of Specification No. 1 since January 1, 1980.
Each side presented two witnesses. The Department offered James Trudden, an NYPD detective and chief of the Broad Channel Volunteer Fire Department, and James O'Keefe, the NYPD's Director of Training. Trudden testified to the particulars of the Labor Day Parade, in which the Volunteer Fire Department also regularly participated. Trudden also said that when he saw the news report the day after the parade, he recognized the plaintiffs personally from having lived with them in Broad Channel. O'Keefe testified to the professionalism training Locurto had received. O'Keefe noted that the training program emphasized the lack of any distinction between on-duty and off-duty behavior.
Locurto appeared on his own behalf. He discussed his involvement in past years' floats and his participation in the 1998 float. He said he had not used any racial slurs or thrown any objects, and that he had been unaware, when the procession began, that Walters would re-enact the murder of James Byrd, Jr. On cross-examination, Locurto said that his only purpose in entering the float was to win the prize for funniest float, and that he did not intend for the float to represent political commentary.
Locurto's second witness was Rev. Sharpton, who testified to the motivation behind the protest he organized. The float, Sharpton said, "was indicative of a systemic problem where people high in the Police Department and Fire Department apparently allow an annual event going on parodying people." Locurto Hearing Transcript at 239. Sharpton said that he and his followers "felt the Mayor who was in political trouble because the nation watched the films of the Million Youth March and was trying to scapegoat the police officer and firemen to try to be a balancing. [sic]" Id.
Locurto wanted to depose Giuliani and Safir and question them on their motivations for suspending him, but Deputy Commissioner Koshetz denied him leave to depose them.
After listening to testimony and closing arguments, Deputy Commissioner Koshetz recommended that Locurto be found guilty of Specification No. 1, but recommended that Specification No. 2 be dismissed. She concluded, based on Locurto's testimony, that the float did not express an opinion on "a matter of public concern," but rather "was designed to mimic and mock a racial group for the amusement of the participants and spectators." In re Charges and Specifications against Police Officer Joseph Locurto, Case No. 73662/98, at 11 (N.Y.P.D Oct. 9, 1998). Moreover, Deputy Commissioner Koshetz found, given the negative media coverage and public response that followed the parade, the NYPD had made "an ample showing of both actual and potential disruption of the Department's working relationships among members of its own work force as well as its ability to function effectively in the multi-cultural environment of our city." Id. at 14. Deputy Commissioner Koshetz concluded that, "[i]n light of the egregiousness of [Locurto's] misconduct and the overwhelmingly negative notoriety this has wrought upon [the] Department and upon thousands of his colleagues who have never thought or acted out in this fashion," the appropriate discipline was to dismiss Locurto from the police force. Id. at 20-21.
Effective October 10, 1998, Safir adopted the recommendation and ended Locurto's NYPD employment.
Steiner's and Walters's FDNY Hearing
The same month, an administrative law judge ("ALJ"), Rosemarie Maldonado, held a hearing on charges filed against Steiner and Walters by the FDNY. Each was accused of violating three FDNY regulations: (1) "engaging in an activity instrumental in arousing racial hatred" ("Charge No. 1"); (2) "conduct unbecoming," for "taking part in . . . a float which depicted African-Americans in a humiliating, callous, and demeaning manner" and for taking part in a reenactment of the James Byrd, Jr. murder ("Charge No. 2"); and (3) violating their oaths of office ("Charge No. 3").
The FDNY called as witnesses, among others, William Feehan, the Department's first deputy commissioner, Steven DeRosa, its chief of training, and Trudden. Feehan opined as to how the public reaction to the floats might have a negative impact on minority recruiting, community relations, and Department morale. Trudden discussed the impact of the float on the Broad Channel Volunteer Fire Department which, after the 1998 parade, began to receive hostile phone calls, experienced rock throwing, and was labeled racist by members of the media. He also suggested that the incident had caused the City to rescind a land sale to the Volunteer Fire Department.
Steiner and Walters offered their own testimony as well as that of seven firefighters — two of whom were African-American — with whom they had worked. All seven firefighters, four of whom had worked with Steiner and three of whom had worked with Walters, testified that they had never witnessed any racist conduct by either Steiner or Walters, and all said they would welcome the chance to work with Steiner or Walters again were they to return to the Department. Steiner testified that the purpose of the float was not to be racist, but "to mimic the community's image of racism and what they thought of a stereotype and to poke fun at them." Steiner and Walters Hearing Transcript at 253. Walters said that he had mocked the dragging death of James Byrd, Jr. in order to "portray stereotypes of the community facing racial integration, a somewhat closed community and to say that we wouldn't allow this to happen in Broad Channel." Id. at 304.
Steiner and Walters sought leave to call Von Essen to testify about a conversation in which he allegedly said that Giuliani ordered him to fire them, but ALJ Maldonado refused to allow the testimony on the ground that it would be only "marginally. . . relevant" and could be obtained in other ways. Id. at 164.
The ALJ recommended that Steiner and Walters be found guilty of Charge No. 2 ("conduct unbecoming") and Charge No. 3 (violating their oaths of office), but that Charge No. 1 ("arousing racial hatred") be dismissed. Unlike the NYPD hearing officer, ALJ Maldonado found that Steiner and Walters "intended to communicate a message on a mater of public concern[;]" to wit, "[t]hey were making a social statement about the future residents of their community." Fire Dep't v. Steiner, Nos. 559 & 560/99, at 12-13 (City of New York Office of Admin. Trials & Hearings Oct. 16, 1998). She found disingenuous, however, Steiner's and Walters's avowals that the float was intended "to promote an integrationist message," id. at 13, finding instead that "[t]here is no credible evidence that the float's message was anything but racist," id. at 16. The ALJ then concluded that Steiner and Walters were fired based on reasonable concerns over the negative impact their speech might have on the perception of the FDNY within minority communities and on minority recruitment of firefighters. Id. at 21-25.
As to penalty, the ALJ recommended that Steiner and Walters be fired.2 Id. at 30. Von Essen adopted the ALJ's recommendation and discharged Steiner and Walters on October 26, 1998.
District Court Opinion
The plaintiffs filed their complaints individually in September 1998, and the three cases were later consolidated. See Locurto v. Safir,
Prior to discovery, both sides moved for summary judgment. The plaintiffs contended that the evidence of disruption of NYPD and FDNY operations was insufficient and that Giuliani had ordered the plaintiffs' dismissals before any administrative hearings were held, thereby indicating that the dismissals were impermissibly retaliatory. See id. The defendants argued for summary judgment on the grounds that (1) the plaintiffs' federal claims were collaterally estopped by the administrative determinations; (2) even if not estopped, the plaintiffs had failed to state valid First and Fourteenth Amendment claims; and (3) the individual defendants were entitled to qualified immunity. See id.
The district court denied both motions without prejudice. Locurto v. Giuliani,
The defendants brought an interlocutory appeal of the district court's refusal to grant summary judgment on the issue of qualified immunity. See Locurto I,
Judge Sprizzo subsequently conducted a three-day bench trial. The court heard testimony from each of the six individual parties, as well as from Lynn Tierney, the former FDNY Deputy Commissioner of Internal Affairs, and Sheldon Wright, the former FDNY Director of Employment Initiatives. The plaintiffs argued that their participation in the float was humorous commentary on a matter of public concern, namely the prospective integration of a predominantly white community, and was therefore fully protected speech under the First Amendment. The defendants argued that (a) both the factual findings and the legal conclusions of the administrative hearings collaterally estopped the plaintiffs' First Amendment claims; (b) the plaintiffs' speech was not on a matter of public concern and therefore was not protected under the First Amendment from adverse employment action; and (c) even if the plaintiffs' speech was protected, the defendants' actions were legally justified by a concern over the potential disruption that the plaintiffs' speech might cause to the effective operations of the NYPD and the FDNY.
In a written opinion dated June 23, 2003, the district court ruled in the plaintiffs' favor. Locurto v. Giuliani,
The district court issued final judgment in November 2004, and ordered all three plaintiffs reinstated to their former positions. Judge Sprizzo also awarded compensation for lost wages and benefits. The defendants timely filed notice of appeal on December 10, 2004.
Discussion
Before reaching the difficult legal questions this case poses, we must establish the factual record. The administrative hearings made certain findings to which the defendants contend we are required to defer. Specifically, the NYPD hearing found that Locurto participated in the float to poke fun and elicit laughter rather than for any political reason, whereas ALJ Maldonado concluded that Steiner and Walters were making a social statement through their actions. ALJ Maldonado also declared that the motivating factor behind the suspensions was the defendants' belief that the plaintiffs' actions "had a negative impact on their operations," and that this motivation was not in dispute.
Subsequently, the district court made a number of significant determinations that it characterized as "factual findings." The court found that the plaintiffs' float had two goals: (1) "to comment on the future racial integration of Broad Channel," and (2) to "win the prize for funniest float." Locurto,
If the district court correctly refused to give collateral estoppel effect to the administrative factfinding, our review of the court's factual findings is limited to correcting clear errors. Skoros v. City of New York,
I.
The Supreme Court has held that, as a matter of federal common law issue preclusion, "when a state agency acting in a judicial capacity . . . resolves disputed issues of fact properly before it which the parties have had an adequate opportunity to litigate, federal courts must give the agency's factfinding the same preclusive effect to which it would be entitled in the State's courts." Univ. of Tennessee v. Elliott,
The district court held that the plaintiffs did not receive a full and fair opportunity to litigate their First Amendment retaliation claims because they were denied adequate discovery into the defendants' motivations for firing them. Locurto,
We note, moreover, that a § 1983 plaintiff is not bound by the findings of an administrative hearing if he is "deprived of the opportunity to litigate his claim fully and fairly before a neutral arbitrator." Colon v. Coughlin,
II.
The Supreme Court's First Amendment employment retaliation jurisprudence was not made for the situation before us. The seminal case, Pickering v. Bd. of Educ.,
The two-step inquiry that has emerged from these cases — often called the "Pickering test" — asks first whether the employee spoke "as a citizen upon matters of public concern," as opposed to "as an employee upon matters only of personal interest." Connick,
Once an employee demonstrates that her speech was the motivating factor behind an adverse employment action, the burden shifts to the Government "to make a substantial showing of likely interference." Jeffries v. Harleston,
These guidelines are, however, just that. In practice, because First Amendment retaliation doctrine must reconcile our dual traditions of at-will employment and of robust license to speak freely without Government sanction, neat doctrinal boxes are of unusually limited usefulness. A single, mechanical test will not do for a salmagundi of challenges, involving both on- and off-duty speech, job-related and not, spoken in protest, for laughs, or, as often, just because. See McEvoy v. Spencer,
A.
Under our cases, the first step in the Pickering inquiry is to determine whether an employee is speaking on a matter of public concern. The question of whether a public employee's First Amendment activity relates to a matter of public concern "is ordinarily a question of law decided on the whole record by taking into account the content, form, and context of a given statement." Melzer,
More recently, a panel of our Court held that an active member of the North American Man/Boy Love Association ("NAMBLA") and the editor of the NAMBLA bulletin, who was fired as a high school teacher after his association with the organization was revealed, was likely engaged in First Amendment activity on a matter of public concern. Melzer,
Some courts, including both our Court and the Supreme Court, have questioned the extent to which the public concern test applies to off-duty speech on topics unrelated to employment. The Supreme Court noted in Roe that, under its previous decision in Treasury Union, "when government employees speak or write on their own time on topics unrelated to their employment, the speech can have First Amendment protection, absent some governmental justification `far stronger than mere speculation' in regulating it." Roe,
The Roe Court's treatment of off-duty speech that is "detrimental to the mission and functions of the employer," id. at 84,
It is more sensible, instead, to treat off-duty, non-work-related speech as presumptively entitled to First Amendment protection regardless of whether, as a threshold matter, it may be characterized as speech on a matter of public concern. As our Court has recognized implicitly, the closeness of a Government employee's off-duty, non-work-related speech to the heart of the First Amendment then becomes relevant as part of the Pickering balancing test, to be weighed against the Government's interest only after the Government meets its burden of identifying a reasonable potential for disruption. See generally Melzer,
But we need not today decide and hence do not resolve whether it was necessary for the plaintiffs to satisfy the public concern test as a threshold matter. This is because, given our resolution of the Pickering balancing test, infra, we can assume arguendo that the plaintiffs' speech in this case did in fact relate to a matter of public concern. See Melzer,
Assuming, therefore, that the plaintiffs were speaking on a matter of public concern, we proceed to the second part of the Pickering framework.
B.
It is undisputed in this case that the plaintiffs' expressive activity was the motivating factor behind their dismissals. Accordingly, the burden is on the Government to make two showings: (1) that the employee's activity was likely to interfere with Government operations and (2) that the Government acted in response to that likely interference and not in retaliation for the content of the speech. See Jeffries II,
The district court held that the defendants did not, in fact, first suspend and then dismiss the plaintiffs in response to any reasonable concern for disruption of NYPD and FDNY operations but rather, and distinctly, "in response to the content of their speech and for reasons of public perception and the political impact expected to flow therefrom." Locurto,
We find no clear error in the district court's holding that Giuliani made a decision on or about September 10, 1998 that, if the plaintiffs' involvement in the float was as originally described, they would be fired. The trial record includes ample evidence to this effect. Giuliani was quoted in an article that ran on September 11, 1998 as saying that any City employee involved in the float would be fired. The next day, he was quoted as saying that, though the plaintiffs "technically" were suspended, they would never be reinstated unless he was ordered to do so by the United States Supreme Court. When he took the stand, Giuliani did not dispute that he made either of these statements. Tr. at 186, 189-90, 211. As the district court noted, Giuliani specifically testified that he was "not sure" whether a decision to fire the plaintiffs was made on September 10, 1998. Tr. at 224.
Giuliani argued on the stand that his statements could not be taken literally because the plaintiffs would have been reinstated had the hearing outcome been different, and that he did not, in any event, legally have the power to fire the plaintiffs. Tr. at 225. But clear error review sharply limits the extent to which we may second-guess the district court's determinations with respect to witness credibility. See, e.g., Phoenix Global Ventures LLC v. Phoenix Hotel Assocs., Ltd.,
We disagree, however, with the district court's legal conclusion, based largely on the timing of the firing decision, that the dismissals were retaliatory or otherwise improper.6 The motive the district court attributed to the defendants encompasses, in effect, two different rationales, which in the court's view were both distinct from any putative concern over disruption: (1) that Giuliani determined to fire the plaintiffs out of hostility toward the content of their speech, and (2) that in firing the plaintiffs his motivating concern was his political image.
The court recited several bases for skepticism that the dismissals were motivated by concern over disruption. First, Giuliani's comments about firing "any police officer, firefighter, or other city employee" came before he knew the identities of the float participants, and so reflected an indifference to the particular job function that such employee might perform. The court said that the lack of any distinction between employees, such as police officers, whose jobs involved significant public contact, and those whose jobs did not involve such contact "undercuts the contention that his statements were motivated primarily by a concern for civil unrest and/or minority recruiting in the police and fire departments." Locurto,
Second, the district court noted that Giuliani admitted to having concerns over the public's perception of his actions, reflected in his testimony that he "wanted people to know that . . . I agreed with their reaction, that this was a horrific incident and that these people had forfeited, in my view, their right to wear the uniform." Tr. at 196. The district court found it conspicuous and relevant that these comments regarding the public's perception came in the immediate aftermath of a highly public controversy over Giuliani's handling of the Million Youth March. The district court did not find persuasive Giuliani's denial that the Million Youth March had any role in his decision with respect to the float. In this respect, the court noted that Von Essen had written in his autobiography that Giuliani was "sensitive to the constant accusations of racism" made against him and the police. Locurto,
Third, the district court considered relevant the fact that the NYPD had not dismissed any officer for racially offensive speech or expression at least since 1991, opting instead for more lenient penalties. The district court suggested that, were the defendants motivated by concern for "interdepartmental friction, diminished civilian confidence and future legal liability," other officers involved in racist speech would have been punished more severely. Id. at 393.
Finally, the district court said that any avowed concern over disruption was undermined by Giuliani's handling of the fatal shooting of unarmed African immigrant Amadou Diallo in February 1999. Despite widespread public condemnation of the officers involved in the Diallo shooting and attendant charges of racism hurled at the NYPD, Giuliani and Safir supported reinstatement of the officers. Id. at 394-95.
We have no doubt that, in considering how to respond to the plaintiffs' actions, Giuliani, Safir, and Von Essen were driven largely by concerns over the public perception of the NYPD and FDNY. Where we part ways with the district court is in our recognition that the Government may, in some circumstances, legitimately regard as "disruptive" expressive activities that instantiate or perpetuate a widespread public perception of police officers and firefighters as racist.
Three of our circuit's cases — Jeffries II, Pappas, and Melzer — give us particular guidance in reaching this conclusion. In Jeffries II, we upheld a jury verdict that permitted City College to reduce the term as department chair of a professor who made controversial public statements about Jews. We noted that prior precedents of our Court had established that the Government could not censure an employee for speaking on issues of public concern "unless the speech actually disrupted the employer's operations." Jeffries,
Given this language, the question in the case before us becomes one of defining a reasonable threat of disruption in the context of the jobs of police officers and firefighters. We considered this question in Pappas, in which we permitted the NYPD to dismiss an officer who worked on Department computers and who had anonymously replied to a series of mail solicitations from charities with racist and antisemitic diatribes, and who, in the process, had generated media attention. Judge Leval's majority opinion explained with characteristic elegance the unique relationship between a police department and the public it serves:
The effectiveness of a city's police department depends importantly on the respect and trust of the community and on the perception in the community that it enforces the law fairly, even-handedly, and without bias. If the police department treats a segment of the population of any race, religion, gender, national origin, or sexual preference, etc., with contempt, so that the particular minority comes to regard the police as oppressor rather than protector, respect for law enforcement is eroded and the ability of the police to do its work in that community is impaired. Members of the minority will be less likely to report crimes, to offer testimony as witnesses, and to rely on the police for their protection. When the police make arrests in that community, its members are likely to assume that the arrests are a product of bias, rather than well-founded, protective law enforcement. And the department's ability to recruit and train personnel from that community will be damaged.
Pappas,
More recently, in Melzer, we reiterated that a Government employer may, in termination decisions, take into account the public's perception of employees whose jobs necessarily bring them into extensive public contact. In permitting the New York City Board of Education to dismiss Melzer for his professed pedophilia and involvement in NAMBLA, we considered "central to our review" the fact that Melzer was a school teacher, a position that "by its very nature requires a degree of public trust not found in many other positions of public employment." Melzer,
Our cases make clear, then, that the district court's dichotomy between the defendants firing the plaintiffs "out of a concern for potential disruption" as against their doing so "for reasons of public perception" or "in response to the content of plaintiffs' speech," Locurto,
All that said, it still must be the case, of course, that the concern for disruption, rather than some other, impermissible motive, was the actual reason for the adverse employment action. See Sheppard v. Beerman,
In the present case, the evidence in the record is overwhelming that, in discharging the plaintiffs, the defendants were motivated primarily by a concern that the public, and particularly members of minority communities, would regard the NYPD and FDNY as racist. This is, of course, a question of fact, and as a result, it is one in which we review the district court's determination for clear error. See Locurto I,
Moreover, the fact that Giuliani viewed the plaintiffs' speech as "a disgusting display of racism" does not, without more, mean he fired the plaintiffs in "retaliation" for engaging in racist speech. Indeed, if Giuliani's inclination were to fire City employees who engaged in racist speech, it would be difficult to explain why, as the plaintiffs themselves point out, the NYPD had never during Giuliani's tenure as mayor dismissed a police officer for this reason. See Locurto,
Giuliani's trial testimony was wholly consonant with his being motivated by the plaintiffs' actions bringing discredit upon the police and fire departments within minority communities. Giuliani said that he was concerned that the plaintiffs "had . . . acted in a highly-unprofessional way, in a way that would do great damage to the police department and the fire department, damage to the city, disrespect to the uniform, create disruption, and [have] consequences for other police officers and firefighters [and] put in question the ability of police officers and firefighters to act impartially with regard to minorities or people of different race[s]." Tr. at 179-80. He also expressed concern about the impact the float's notoriety would have on minority recruiting, particularly within the FDNY. See Tr. at 180, 182-83.
The district court was, of course, free to place diminished weight on this testimony or even to disbelieve it outright, but its conclusion that Giuliani's motive was impermissible must itself be supported by evidence in the record. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(a). Although Rule 52(a) demands great deference to a trial court's factual findings in general, and to its credibility determinations in particular, we have not hesitated to find clear error "where the court has failed to synthesize the evidence in a manner that accounts for conflicting evidence or the gaps in a party's evidentiary presentation." Doe v. Menefee,
We have already said that the district court's discomfort with Giuliani's worries over the general public perception of the float was misplaced. The only remaining, arguably impermissible, motive attributed to Giuliani was a concern over the "political impact" of the public reaction to the float. There are two distinct senses in which Giuliani's motive could be described as "political." First, he could have been concerned about the public perception of the police and fire departments and of the City. As mentioned, this concern is, in itself, an entirely legitimate one in the context of deliberate public acts by police officers and firefighters that are perceived as racist. Second, Giuliani could have been more specifically motivated by concerns over his personal popularity and/or his ability to continue to pursue his political agenda or win future elections. This would, of course, be an impermissible reason for dismissing the plaintiffs. But the only evidence in the record that, arguably, evinces this motive is the fact that Giuliani had recently been criticized over his handling of the Million Youth March. And that evidence is questionable, for Von Essen's book, which the district court said "tied [the March controversy] to the decision-making process in this case," Locurto,
In short, stripped of the analysis undermined by Jeffries II, Pappas, and Melzer, and in the light of substantial contrary evidence, the district court's conclusion that Giuliani ordered the plaintiffs' dismissals for improper motives rests on too thin a reed, one that "on the entire evidence" leaves us "with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed." Anderson v. City of Bessemer City,
Moreover, we have no difficulty concluding, contrary to the district court, see Locurto,
The district court placed great weight on the fact that the threatened disruption was "external" rather than "internal." See Locurto,
C.
Our determination that the defendants were motivated by a reasonable concern for the potentially disruptive effects of the plaintiffs' actions does not end our inquiry. A plaintiff alleging an adverse employment action in violation of the First Amendment can prevail even over an employer who took the action for legitimate reasons if the employee's expressive interests outweigh the employer's interest in preventing disruption. See Jeffries II,
We nonetheless find that the defendants' interest in maintaining a relationship of trust between the police and fire departments and the communities they serve outweighed the plaintiffs' expressive interests in this case. If the NYPD and FDNY have any greater interests than these, they are few. See Pappas,
Conclusion
We do not today endorse Justice Holmes's widely discredited dictum that one has "a constitutional right to talk politics, but . . . has no constitutional right to be a policeman." McAuliffe v. Mayor & Bd. of Aldermen,
The judgment of the district court is therefore REVERSED and the case is REMANDED with instructions to enter judgment in favor of the defendants on the plaintiffs' federal claims. The state claims are dismissed without prejudice. Each party will bear its own costs.
Notes:
Notes
The reference, one presumes, is to a line attributed to Malcolm X — "We didn't land on Plymouth Rock, Plymouth Rock landed on us,"see Malcolm X (40 Acres & A Mule Filmworks 1992) — and not to the title song from Cole Porter's Anything Goes, which contains a similar line, see Paul Whiteman with Ramona Davies, Anything Goes (RCA Victor 1934) ("Times have changed / and we've often rewound the clock / since the Puritans got a shock / when they landed on Plymouth Rock. / If today, / any shock they should try to stem, / `stead of landing on Plymouth Rock, / Plymouth Rock would land on them.'").
Only three remedial options were available to the ALJ: reprimand, loss of 10 days' pay, or dismissal from the Fire DepartmentSee New York City Admin. Code § 15-113. The ALJ said that loss of three months' pay would be more appropriate than dismissal, but that loss of 10 days' pay was too lenient. Steiner, Nos. 559 & 560/99, at 28-29.
ALJ Maldonado's denial of Steiner's and Walters's request to call Von Essen might have been motivated by her suggestion that the motivating factor behind the suspension decision was "not in dispute." To the extent the agency considered this issue not to be contested, the district court's findings as to Von Essen's motivation are not "identical to a material issue necessarily decided by the administrative agency in a prior proceeding,"Jeffreys,
This is not to say that a neutral arbitrator at a pre-termination administrative hearing is a requirement ofdue process. As we held in Locurto I, a pre-termination hearing before a non-neutral adjudicator may yet comport with due process "where the state affords plaintiff, subsequent to his termination, a full adversarial hearing before a neutral adjudicator." Locurto I,
Ceballos v. Garcetti,
As we noted inLocurto I, although the defendants' intent is a factual question, which we review for clear error, whether that intent ultimately amounts to "retaliation" forbidden by the Constitution is a question of law, which we review de novo. See Locurto I,
And, although it is true that the Amadou Diallo controversy also generated notoriety and racial tension within the City, the similarity to this case ends there. Whatever one's opinion of the actions of the officers in the Diallo case, it was the position of the NYPD and the Mayor that the officers were acting within the scope of their duties, and it is undisputed that the officers were acquitted in court of any wrongdoingLocurto,
Because thePickering balancing test weighs in favor of the defendants, we need not reach and do not decide whether the individual defendants would otherwise be entitled to qualified immunity.
