OPINION
Plaintiffs Paula and Harold Milligan appeal the orders of the district court granting the United States’s motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction and Sinclair Broadcasting’s motion for summary judgment. We AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
I. BACKGROUND
In October 2006, law enforcement officials across twenty-four states conducted Operation Falcon III (“the Operation”), a week-long fugitive round-up that led to the arrest of 10,733 people. During the Operation, the U.S. Marshals Service (“the Marshals”) worked in conjunction with local law enforcement officers to locate and apprehend individuals wanted on federal, state, or local felony warrants. In Nashville, the Marshals worked with officers at the Metropolitan Nashville Police Department (“Metro”), who were specially deputized as U.S. Marshals for the Operation. Plaintiff Paula Milligan was among the numerous arrestees. It is undisputed that, due to a series of clerical mistakes, police arrested the wrong person.
In preparation for the Operation, Metro’s Warrants Division received all the outstanding warrants for processing. A data entry clerk received the warrants and entered each suspect’s name and identifying information into a spreadsheet, and this information was later used to create arrest folders for use during the Operation. One of these warrants was for “Paula Milligan a.k.a. Paula Rebecca Staps,” (“Milligan/Staps”) a five-foot, three-inch, twenty-four-year old white female with brown hair and blue eyes, and a North Carolina driver’s license and address. Rather than manually entering all this information, the clerk responsible for processing the warrant first looked her up in the Master Name Index, a database containing information of individuals already in Metro’s system. When the clerk processed the warrant for “Paula Milligan a.k.a. Paula Rebecca Staps,” he searched for “Paula Milligan” and, because an entry existed, allowed the database to autofill all of Paula Milligan’s identifying information. Unknown to the clerk, this personal information actually belonged to a different Paula Milligan — the Plaintiff, a five-foot, six-inch, forty-two-year old white female with blond hair and brown eyes, and a Tennessee driver’s license and address. This Paula Milligan’s information appeared in the index because of a traffic ticket she received a few years prior to the issuance of the warrant. The clerk failed to cross-reference the physical description given on the warrant with the description already in the index, and this mistake caused Milligan’s date of birth and driver’s license number to be linked to the outstanding warrant for Milligan/Staps.
Metro then sent this completed spreadsheet to the Marshals, who forwarded it to the Tennessee Bureau of Investigations (“Bureau”) to prepare the arrest files. After forwarding the spreadsheet, Metro prepared a second version, removing all individuals with out-of-state addresses since the focus of the Operation was on local cases. This second version was not forwarded to the Bureau, so the Bureau prepared arrest files for local and out-of-state suspects, including one for Milli *691 gan/Staps. Because the Milligan/Staps warrant had a North Carolina address and was removed from the second spreadsheet, had the Bureau instead relied on the second spreadsheet, it would not have created this arrest file. 1
On October 24, Officer Doug Anderson and his team arrived at Milligan’s home to execute the arrest warrant. Anderson carried a copy of her arrest file, though the file did not contain the warrant. It is unknown whether Anderson reviewed the file, but immediately prior to the arrest, he called a warrant clerk to verify that the warrant was still active. Anderson provided the warrant clerk with Milligan’s name and date of birth, and the clerk immediately confirmed that the warrant was active. Given the immediacy of the clerk’s response, the Defendants concede that she did not physically locate and review the warrant. Additionally, had she reviewed the warrant, she would have noticed that the date of birth did not match the one Anderson provided. Relying on the clerk’s assurance, Anderson and his team arrested Milligan, despite the Milligans’ adamant claims of mistaken identity. On November 1, 2006, all criminal charges against Milligan were dropped, as it became clear that she had been erroneously arrested. The court issued a final order confirming the dismissal on November 6, 2006.
Prior to the Operation, the Marshals contacted local media outlets and offered an opportunity to ride along and report on the Operation. WZTV-Fox 17 (“Fox 17”), a local television station operated by Sinclair Broadcasting, accepted. Fox 17 was permitted to ride along on October 24, 2006, but agreed not to air footage until November 2, 2006, after the Operation concluded. On the day of Milligan’s arrest, a Fox 17 reporter and videographer accompanied Anderson’s team to her home, observing and filming her arrest. The reporter was aware that the officers had an arrest file for Milligan, but never reviewed the contents in preparation for the news story.
On November 2, 2006, the day after criminal charges against Milligan were dropped, the news embargo lifted and Fox 17 was permitted to air its story on the Operation. That day, Fox 17 broadcasted a news story providing general information about the Operation as well as footage of people being arrested and descriptions of their crimes. The report also had interviews with police officers and video footage of two arrests, one of which was Milligan’s arrest. The story stated that “[t]heir first arrest came early — Paula Milligan, wanted on four counts of forgery and one count of identity theft” and claimed that the arrests were made “with warrants in hand.” The report also included about seven seconds of video showing Milligan being escorted into the police car. The report also focused on other people arrested during that day, including arrests for drug and sex offenses.
The story originally ran on the news at 9:00 at night and then a shorter version played again an hour later. Fox 17 also placed the video on its website, along with a written story. On November 3, 2006, the Milligans’ attorney faxed a cease and desist letter to Fox 17. The letter informed Fox 17 that the police had arrested the wrong person and demanded that Fox 17 stop broadcasting the footage. This *692 letter was the first communication between Milligan and Fox 17 after her arrest, as she had never before contacted the station or any other news source to inform them that her arrest had been an error. Sinclair alleges that, until this letter, at no point did they know of any irregularity or problem with Milligan’s arrest. After receiving the letter, Fox 17 stopped broadcasting the story and removed the footage. Although the direct links were removed from the website, due to technical difficulties, the original report was still accessible on the website through a keyword search until November 18.
In October 2007, the Milligans filed federal and state lawsuits against the United States of America, the U.S. Marshals Service, the City of Nashville/Metro, Sinclair Broadcasting, and various named and unnamed Marshals, Metro officers, and Sinclair employees. These lawsuits raised an abundance of federal and state claims, including civil rights violations, defamation, invasion of privacy, false arrest, false imprisonment, and assault and battery. As most claims have been previously resolved, the only issues remaining before this Court are the Federal Tort Claims Act (“FTCA”) claim against the United States and the defamation and false light claim against Sinclair Broadcasting. On July 21, 2009, the district court granted Sinclair’s motion for summary judgment on the defamation and false light claims. And on September 4, 2009, the district court granted the United States’s motion to dismiss the FTCA claims for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. The Milligans timely appeal both of these orders.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Motion To Dismiss For Lack Of Subject Matter Jurisdiction Under The FTCA
The FTCA provides a limited sovereign immunity waiver and subject matter jurisdiction for plaintiffs to pursue state law tort claims against the United States. 28 U.S.C. § 1346(b)(1). The FTCA waives sovereign immunity where state law would impose liability against a private individual,
Myers v. United States,
The FTCA, as a limited grant of jurisdiction, excludes certain tort claims from its sovereign immunity waiver.
See
28 U.S.C. § 2680. Because the FTCA is a jurisdictional statute, “[i]f a case falls within the statutory exceptions of 28 U.S.C. § 2680, the court lacks subject matter jurisdiction” and the case must be dismissed.
Feyers v. United States,
1. Discretionary Function Exception
The discretionary function exception insulates the government from tort *693 liability for claims arising from a federal actor’s “exercise ... [of] a discretionary function or duty....” 28 U.S.C. § 2680(a). The district court found the discretionary function exception to bar the Milligans’ tort claim and, on this basis, granted the United States’s motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. The Milligans, contending the district court erred, maintain that Metro’s tortious conduct was not discretionary conduct that falls within the scope of § 2680(a).
To determine whether allegedly tortious conduct falls within the discretionary function exception, this Court applies the Supreme Court’s two-pronged
Gaubert
test.
Rosebush v. United States,
The crucial first step in deciding whether the conduct was discretionary “is to determine exactly what conduct is at issue,”
Rosebush,
The Milligans’ reading of this procedure is a misguided characterization of Metro’s procedure and takes it out of context. The section immediately following the relevant provision demands that all original warrants remain in the warrants office and delineates the procedure for removal of an original warrant. When the procedure requiring that “[c]opies of warrants will be used to attempt service” is read in conjunction with this subsequent section, the procedure is more aptly construed as for *694 bidding officers from using an original warrant during a warrant execution, and not as an affirmative requirement that officers have a warrant in hand during all arrests. Reading the procedure as a prohibition against using original warrants is also the most practical interpretation. A police department procedure forbidding arrests made without a physically present arrest warrant is implausible. This procedure would force officers to carry copies of all the outstanding warrants just in case the officer encounters a fugitive and it would hamper the police’s ability to make legitimate arrests.
As properly interpreted, this procedure does not create a mandatory requirement that Metro officers failed to follow, and so the Milligans cannot rely on it to preclude application of the discretionary function exception. The Milligans do not point to any other federal statutes, regulations, or policies that prohibit or prescribe officer conduct during the investigation and execution of a warrant. Therefore, Metro’s actions during the execution of the arrest warrant were discretionary under the first prong of the Gaubert analysis.
Finding Metro’s actions discretionary, we next inquire, “whether that judgment is of the kind that the discretionary function exception was designed to shield.”
Gaubert,
[T]he decision regarding how to locate and identify the subject of an arrest warrant is fundamentally rooted in policy considerations, and that judicial second-guessing of this decision thus is not appropriate.... [Therefore,] the investigation of the whereabouts and identity of the subject of an arrest warrant ... is conduct that falls within the discretionary function exception.
Id. The Mesa court further concluded that the “process of determining whether the person apprehended is actually the person named in the arrest warrant is grounded in considerations of public policy.” Id. When faced with verifying the arrestee’s identity, police must consider the potential danger to public safety of letting the suspect go as well as the possibility that the suspect will destroy evidence or flee. Id. “All of these considerations are rooted in policy considerations. Accordingly, we conclude that the discretionary function exception applies to the process of determining whether the person apprehended is *695 actually the person named in the arrest warrant.” Id.
We agree with the Eleventh Circuit that the process of verifying whether the apprehended person is actually the suspect named in the warrant “is grounded in considerations of public policy,”
id.,
and that these policy considerations are “of the kind that the discretionary function exception was designed to shield.”
Gaubert,
2. Section 2680(h): Intentional Tort Exception
The intentional tort exception insulates the government from intentional tort liability. 28 U.S.C. § 2680(h). However, there is an exception to this exception. If a federal law enforcement or investigative officer engages in “assault, battery, false imprisonment, false arrest, abuse of process, or malicious prosecution,” sovereign immunity is waived and courts have subject matter jurisdiction under the FTCA. 2 Id. The district court determined that the federal law enforcement carve out to the intentional tort exception did not provide subject matter jurisdiction to the Milligans’ claims because Metro’s actions were not intentional torts.
In determining whether the plaintiffs claim falls within the law enforcement exception to the intentional tort exception, we must look to the substance of the claim and not limit our review to how the plaintiff pleaded the cause of action.
See Satterfield v. United States,
This same logic applies in the opposite direction to a plaintiffs attempt to recast a negligence tort as an intentional tort to take advantage of the law enforcement exception to § 2680(h). Yet, the Milligans attempt precisely this move by cloaking what is fundamentally a negligence suit in intentional tort suit language. Even though the Milligans frame their lawsuit as an intentional false arrest claim, they fail to provide even a shred of evidence suggesting law enforcement officers’ intent to falsely arrest Milligan. The facts demonstrate that Milligan’s arrest was the product of three negligent acts committed by separate law enforcement actors. First, the Warrants Division clerk entered the warrant using the automatic fill-in option and, by not cross-referencing the identifying information, mistakenly tied Milligan to the warrant. Second, Metro sent this data to the Marshals without removing the out-of-state addresses, and this list was forwarded to the Bureau to prepare arrest files. Third, immediately prior to Milligan’s arrest, another Warrants Division clerk erroneously verified the warrant’s validity without actually inspecting it.
At any point, a closer inspection of the warrant may have alerted authorities to their mistakes, preventing Milligan’s arrest; however, this failure to use reasonable care may give rise to an action in negligence, not in intentional tort. The Milligans may not seek the § 2680(h) safe harbor by recasting law enforcement’s negligent acts as an intentional tort. As the law enforcement exception § 2680(h) provides no basis for the Milligans’ negligence suit against federal officers, the district court properly granted the United States’s motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
B. Motions For Summary Judgment On Defamation And False Light Claims
The Milligans also brought suit against Sinclair Broadcasting, claiming that Fox 17’s Operation report was defamatory and portrayed Milligan in a false light. The district court granted summary judgment to Sinclair Broadcasting, finding that the Tennessee fair report privilege applied to Fox 17’s coverage of the Operation and barred the Milligans’ defamation and false light claims. This Court reviews a district court’s grant of a motion for summary judgment de novo,
Himes v. United States,
The Tennessee fair report privilege is a qualified privilege that raises the state of mind requirement in both defamation and false light actions to an actual malice standard.
See Lewis v. NewsChannel 5 Network, L.P.,
We must first determine whether Fox 17’s report concerned an official action. The fair report privilege does not protect a media defendant’s reporting on all “statements made by any governmental employee in any circumstance,” but rather it is limited to reports of “public proceedings or official actions of government that have been made public.”
Lewis,
[A]n arrest by an officer is an official action, and a report of the fact of the arrest or of the charge of crime made by the officer ... is within the fair report privilege; however, statements made by the police or by the complainant or other witnesses ... as to the facts of the case ... are not.
Id. (quoting Restatement (Second) of Torts § 611 cmt. h, at 301) (internal quotation marks omitted). Under this standard, Fox 17’s Operation news story is a report of an official action for purposes of the fair report privilege. The report included only one statement concerning Milligan, asserting that “[t]heir first arrest came early— Paula Milligan wanted on four counts of forgery and one count of identity theft.” This report does not include any opinions or embellishments from third parties and is limited to reporting only “the fact of the arrest [and] the charge of [the] crime.” Id. at 287.
We must next turn to the issue of whether Fox 17’s Operation news report was a fair and accurate portrayal of Milligan’s arrest. The fair report privilege protects only fair and accurate portrayals of the official action; however, a “report need not be a verbatim, technically accurate account in every detail, as long as it conveys a correct and just impression of what took place.” Id. at 284. Minor, insignificant factual discrepancies will not overcome the fair report privilege, but a media defendant may not rely on the privilege when reporting “false statements] of fact regarding what occurred during the proceeding ... or [a] one-sided account of the proceeding....” Id.
The Milligans contend that Fox 17’s report was not fair and accurate because it erroneously implied that the officers arresting Milligan had a warrant physically present at the time of arrest. The Operation segment opened with the phrase “with warrants in hand, teams of officers swarmed across Middle Tennessee.” The report later showed footage of Milligan’s arrest and stated that she was arrested on four counts of forgery and one count of identity theft. It should first be noted that the statement “with warrants in hand” is most appropriately viewed as an introductory remark, not commentary on the particulars of Milligan’s arrest. But even if this comment is imputed directly to Milligan’s arrest, this minor inaccuracy is insufficient to defeat the fair report privi *698 lege because it is an insignificant, technical discrepancy. See id. The overall gist of the report is that Milligan was arrested on forgery and identity theft charges, and whether the officers physically had a warrant in hand at the time of this arrest or radioed it in to the Warrants Division has no real effect on whether the report conveyed a “just impression of what took place.” Id. Even though the “with warrants in hand” statement is false as applied to Milligan, it is not such a large transgression that it creates a “one-sided ... defamatory” account of the official action, and therefore, it is covered by the fair report privilege. See id.
Because Fox 17 provided a fair and accurate report of an official action, the fair report privilege requires the plaintiff to prove by clear and convincing evidence that the defendant acted with actual malice.
Id.
at 283. A defendant’s defamatory remark is made with actual malice when made “with knowledge that it was false or with reckless disregard of whether it was false or not.”
New York Times Co. v. Sullivan,
The Milligans are unable to meet their burden of establishing actual malice because their argument solely rests on the Defendant’s failure to conduct an independent investigation. They argue that the reporter should have read the arrest file or conducted independent research on the validity of Milligan’s arrest warrant as well as the aftermath of her arrest. However, the Milligans are unable to provide any evidence suggesting that the reporter “entertained serious doubts as to the truth” of the report,
Compuware Corp.,
Therefore, we conclude that the district court properly found that the Tennessee fair report privilege shields Sinclair Broadcasting’s liability for any inaccuracies in their Operation news report regarding *699 Milligan’s arrest. The Milligans were unable to meet their burden under the fair report privilege of proving actual malice, and because no genuine issues of material fact relating to the defamation or false light claims exist, the district court properly granted Sinclair Broadcasting’s motion for summary judgment.
III. CONCLUSION
The district court’s grants of the United States’s motion to dismiss and Sinclair Broadcasting’s motion for summary judgment are AFFIRMED.
Notes
. In preparing Milligan’s arrest file, the Bureau made further investigation and found that she had no criminal record on the national crime database, no outstanding warrants, and no local warrants. This information was entered into a worksheet and placed in her arrest file. The worksheet also asked if the warrant had been confirmed, and Milligan's section was left blank.
. We are cognizant of the disagreement among the circuits regarding the interaction between § 2680(a) and § 2680(h).
Compare Nguyen v. United States,
