Curtis McCarty brought this 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action against Joyce Gilchrist, former forensic chemist for the Oklahoma City Police Department (OCPD), William Citty, OCPD Chief of Police, and the city of Oklahoma City. McCarty’s complaint alleged constitutional violations and damages under theories of malicious prosecution, municipal liability for failure to train or supervise, and supervisor liability for failure to train or supervise. McCarty appeals from the district court’s adverse grant of summary judgment, and we affirm.
*1283 I.
In 1986, McCarty was charged in Oklahoma state court with the first-degree murder of eighteen-year-old Pam Willis. After a jury trial, McCarty was convicted and sentenced to death. McCarty appealed, and the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals (OCCA) reversed.
McCarty v. State,
McCarty was retried in 1989. The jury again convicted McCarty of first-degree murder and sentenced him to death. On appeal, the OCCA affirmed the conviction but reversed the death sentence because the District Court of Oklahoma County had refused to instruct the jury on the alternative sentencing option of life imprisonment without parole.
McCarty v. State,
McCarty then applied to the OCCA for postconviction relief, alleging that the informants who testified against him were unreliable, that the criticism of Macy’s trial practices in various judicial opinions showed that his conviction was inherently unreliable, and that his counsel had been ineffective.
McCarty v. State,
In 2001, the FBI launched an investigation into Gilchrist’s forensic work, this court concluded Gilchrist had fabricated evidence in
Mitchell v. Gibson,
On remand, the District Court of Oklahoma County held a hearing on May 10-11, 2007, to discuss the status of the case and to rule on the parties’ various pre-trial motions. At the close of the hearing, the court found that in 2000, Gilchrist had intentionally destroyed the potentially exculpatory hair evidence recovered from the victim’s chest and inside the victim’s chest wound. The court concluded that this finding required dismissal of the charges against McCarty.
See Hogan v. State,
McCarty brought a civil suit under § 1983 in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma on the theories of malicious prosecution, 2 municipal liability for failure to train or supervise, and supervisor liability for failure to train or supervise. The district court dismissed the complaint with prejudice, ruling that McCarty’s § 1983 claims accrued when his conviction was reversed on July 14, 2005, and his lawsuit, filed December 5, 2007, was barred by the two-year statute of limitations. On McCarty’s motion, the district court permitted him to file an amended complaint alleging an ongoing conspiracy that continued until all charges against him were dismissed in 2007. After discovery, the district court granted summary judgment in favor of the defendants, concluding that McCarty’s claims were barred by the statute of limitations, or alternatively, failed as a matter of law. McCarty appeals.
II.
A. Standard of Review
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the non-moving party.
Vaughn v. Epworth Villa,
B. Section 1983 Malicious Prosecution Claims
Section 1983 provides a federal civil remedy for the “deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution” by any person acting under color of state law. 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The analysis in a § 1983 case begins with the identification of the precise constitutional right allegedly infringed.
Graham v. Connor,
In addition to alleging a constitutional violation, a § 1983 plaintiff must prove other tort elements.
Novitsky v. City of Aurora,
This Court has analogized a § 1983 malicious prosecution claim to the common law tort of malicious prosecution in articulating its elements:
The elements of the common law tort of malicious prosecution, as applicable in a § 1983 claim, are: (1) the defendant caused the plaintiffs continued confinement or prosecution; (2) the original action terminated in favor of the plaintiff; (3) there was no probable cause to support the original arrest, continued confinement, or prosecution; (4) the defendant acted with malice; and (5) the plaintiff sustained damages.
Novitsky,
We disagree with McCarty’s characterization of the
Pierce
decision.
Pierce
expressly left open the issue of whether an absence of probable cause is required for § 1983 malicious prosecution claims.
Id.
at 1294. Because neither party disputed that the constitutional tort of malicious prosecution requires an absence of probable cause, the
Pierce
Court assumed that it did, observing that the plaintiff would “bear the heavy burden” of proof on remand.
Id.
at 1294-95. Moreover, in
Novitsky
and
Wilkins v. DeReyes,
this Court clearly stated that the constitutional tort of
*1286
malicious prosecution requires the plaintiff to prove lack of probable cause.
Novitsky,
McCarty attempts to distinguish the present case because the § 1983 malicious prosecution claims in
Novitsky
and
Wilkins
were based on the Fourth Amendment whereas his claims are based on the Fourteenth Amendment.
Pierce,
which included both Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment claims, indicated that no such distinction exists.
See Pierce,
Based on Fourth Amendment probable cause principles and viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to McCarty, the State had probable cause to prosecute McCarty. The substance of probable cause is a “reasonable ground for belief of guilt.”
Mink v. Knox,
For purposes of the probable cause determination, we consider whether the evidence supported a reasonable belief in McCarty’s guilt: (1) without Gilchrist’s testimony that the hairs found on the victim’s chest and in the chest wound were consistent with McCarty’s hair; (2) with McCarty excluded as the source of the semen in the victim; (3) with the withheld evidence that the bloody footprint on the victim’s thigh was not McCarty’s; (4) with evidence that the hairs discovered on the rope used to strangle the victim were not McCarty’s; and (5) with evidence that the hairs destroyed by Gilchrist, which were found on the victim’s chest and in the chest wound, were not McCarty’s. We conclude that despite the egregiousness of Gilchrist’s alleged actions in this case, the State’s theory of the case and the additional evidence against McCarty supported a reasonable belief in McCarty’s guilt.
Based on the medical examiner’s conclusion that Willis’s death was caused by both stab wounds and asphyxiation, the State theorized from the beginning of the case that two individuals committed the crime. In addition, other physical evidence in the record implicated McCarty in Willis’s death. McCarty’s fingerprint was found on a vase on a coffee table at the crime scene, and Willis’s roommate testified that she cleaned the vase the morning of the murder.
McCarty,
Further, witness statements supported a reasonable belief in McCarty’s guilt. Testimony from several individuals placed McCarty in the vicinity of the crime scene the night of the murder. Id. at 117-18. Several witnesses also recounted statements McCarty made implicating himself in the crime. Gerald Griffin testified that he had a conversation with McCarty about the murder of a girl. Id. at 118. McCarty told Griffin that he and a friend had gone to the girl’s house to sell her acid and then left, but later his friend went back to the house and killed the girl after she overdosed. Id. Another witness, Cindy Parks, testified that she had a conversation with McCarty in which he stated the police had released incorrect information regarding *1287 Willis’s death. Id. Parks stated that McCarty told her he had been paid to kill Willis for “burning” someone on a drug deal. Id. He said he had gone to the house while Willis was sleeping, slashed her throat, smoked a cigarette, and then left, but that he had not sexually assaulted her. Id. Theodore Elgin testified that he overheard McCarty discussing the murder of a girl with other inmates while both were being held in the Oklahoma County Jail. Id.
Finally, McCarty gave conflicting statements to the police regarding his whereabouts and activities the night of the murder. When the police first interviewed McCarty, he stated that Willis’s roommate called him the night before the murder and asked him to obtain acid for Willis. Id. at 119. Two friends, Chas Kelly and Shawn McCarthy, arrived at his house while he was trying to access the requested drugs, and later they went to Willis’s house to deliver the drugs. Id. The three men were there for a short time, and then they left for band practice. Id. The second time the police interviewed McCarty, he provided the same account of the day before the murder. Id. This time, however, he also stated that he went to Willis’s house the night of the murder. Id. He and a friend named Steve had gone to Willis’s house to sell her more acid, but Willis said she had already made plans to purchase acid from Shawn later that night. Id. McCarty left with Steve, went drinking, took drugs, and then Steve took McCarty home. Id. McCarty admitted during the second interview that he had told people that he knew who killed Willis, but explained that he had only been guessing. McCarty also speculated that Shawn had killed Willis because she “burned him on the drug deal.” Id.
When the police interviewed McCarty a third time, he provided the same account of the day before the murder. Id. He then stated that he had gone to Willis’s house the night of the murder with his drug connection, Rick Terry, to facilitate an exchange of sex for drugs between Willis and Terry. Id. McCarty dropped Terry off at Willis’s house and on his way back to the house, his car stalled. Id. When McCarty phoned Willis’s house, Terry informed him that Willis had tried to steal money and drugs from him and that McCarty should keep his mouth shut about the incident. Id. These varying accounts provided by McCarty, along with the physical evidence and witness statements, support a reasonable belief in McCarty’s guilt.
McCarty nevertheless contends that probable cause was retroactively vitiated when a 2007 DNA test of the genetic material recovered from underneath Willis’s fingernails excluded him as a major contributor. This evidence was not available at the time McCarty was initially prosecuted, however, and the assessment of probable cause is directed at the time of prosecution.
Pierce,
McCarty makes an additional argument with respect to his § 1983 malicious prosecution claim for the alleged intentional destruction of potentially exculpatory evidence. 3 Relying on Pierce, McCarty ar *1288 gues that the nature of the constitutional violation changes the analysis of whether he can prove that no probable cause existed to prosecute him. Specifically, McCarty asserts that the requirement is met here because Youngblood requires dismissal of all charges when potentially exculpatory evidence is destroyed, and thus probable cause to prosecute him “simply disappeared]” the instant Gilchrist destroyed evidence in 2000.
This argument conflates two elements of § 1983 malicious prosecution. The
Young-blood
violation satisfies the constitutional violation element of malicious prosecution, but McCarty must also prove the separate element of the absence of probable cause to prosecute. McCarty alleges that Gilchrist destroyed the slides containing the hairs found on the victim’s chest and in the chest wound, so we assume that the hairs were not McCarty’s and remove Gilchrist’s testimony regarding the hairs from the probable cause equation.
See Pierce,
In addition, McCarty’s argument ignores the fact that the appropriate remedy for a
Youngblood
violation has not been determined by the Oklahoma courts, and as evidenced by the split of authority on the question, it was not a foregone conclusion that dismissal would be required. Some courts have held, as McCarty contends, that the only remedy for the bad faith destruction of potentially exculpatory evidence under
Youngblood
is the dismissal of all charges.
See, e.g., State v. Lang,
C. Claims for Municipal Liability and Supervisor Liability
In addition to his § 1983 malicious prosecution claims, McCarty seeks damages under theories of municipal liability for failure to train or supervise and supervisor liability for failure to train or supervise. Even though Gilchrist is not liable for violating McCarty’s constitutional rights, the city may nevertheless be liable as a municipality for the failure to train or supervise, and Chief Citty may nevertheless be liable as a supervisor for the failure to
*1289
train or supervise.
See Dodds v. Richardson,
The statute of limitations period for a § 1983 claim is dictated by the personal injury statute of limitations in the state in which the claim arose,
Wallace v. Koto,
When the § 1983 claim is based on an allegedly unconstitutional conviction or other harm that, if determined to be unlawful, would render a conviction or sentence invalid, accrual is delayed until the conviction or sentence has been invalidated.
Heck v. Humphrey,
In “regular appeals” before the OCCA, the decision of the court is not final until
*1290
20 days after the filing of the decision in order to give the parties time to file a petition for rehearing.
See
Okla.Crim. App. R. 3.14(D);
see also
Okla.Crim.App. R. 1.2(A). If the parties fail to file a petition for rehearing within the 20 days, the decision is final.
Id. But see Yates v. Brock,
McCarty argues that the OCCA decision could not have been effective to reverse his conviction until the mandate was issued because the mandate was needed to transfer jurisdiction to the trial court.
See Yates,
III.
The decision of the district court dismissing McCarty’s claims is affirmed.
Notes
. McCarty's complaint alleged numerous violations of his constitutional rights by Gilchrist and by a conspiracy between Gilchrist, the OCPD, and Oklahoma City. The district court construed these allegations as raising a § 1983 malicious prosecution claim because McCarty explicitly stated in a responsive motion that "[tjhis case is akin to a malicious prosecution claim and nothing else.” McCarty does not dispute this characterization.
. Because the parties agree that Gilchrist’s actions in 2000 violated McCarty's constitu
*1288
tional rights, we assume that the
Youngblood
decision, which addressed a defendant's due process rights in the preconviction context, applies equally to a defendant’s due process rights in the postconviction context.
Compare Yarns v. Cnty. of Del.,
. Although the determination of when the
Heck
bar was lifted applies to all McCarty's claims, we do not reach the statute of limitations issue with respect to McCarty’s § 1983 malicious prosecution claims. We do note, however, that in addition to the
Heck
bar issue, assessing when the statute of limitations for McCarty's § 1983 malicious prosecution claims began to run raises additional questions. The statute of limitations for a § 1983 malicious prosecution claim does not begin to run until the prior criminal proceeding is terminated in favor of the accused,
Mondragón v. Thompson,
