The district court dismissed this purported First Amendment political discrimination claim brought by Alejandro Miranda-Otero (“Miranda”) seeking a million dollars in damages from his employer, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico Industrial Commission; the Commission’s president, Gilberto Charriez-Rosario (“Charriez”); and several co-workers. The co-worker defendants were Ayxa Rey-Díaz (“Rey”), the Director of the Commission’s Legal Division, and Adalberto Pantojas-Fonseca (“Pantojas”). For good measure, Miranda also sued one Juan Rivera-Lomefio (“Rivera”), whom the complaint alleged was not a Commonwealth employee at all, but an employee of a private contractor who worked as a security guard at the Commission.
The original motion to dismiss, although captioned a Rule 12(b)(6) motion, attached evidentiary materials and was filed after there had been discovery. The plaintiff did not, in opposition, file a Rule 56(f) affidavit or move to strike the materials. The court allowed the motion to dismiss. 1 Plaintiff subsequently moved for reconsideration and attached evidentiary materials of his own. The court denied the reconsideration motion in a brief opinion and order.
Miranda appeals, saying his complaint stated a claim and survives even if one considers the evidentiary facts relied on by the district court in denying his motion for reconsideration. It does not and we affirm. 2
I.
We review the district court’s order of dismissal de novo and may affirm on any ground supported by the record.
Platten v. HG Berm. Exempted Ltd.,
A. Dismissal of Defendants Charriez, Pantojas, and Rivera
Miranda’s complaint stated that he began working at the Commission while the New Progressive Party was in power in Puerto Rico, and that he was a supporter of then-Commission President Basilio Torres Rivera. During the spring and summer of 2003, the complaint alleged, Charriez, Pantojas, and Rivera took a variety of actions against him. Pantojas, a coworker, allegedly told Miranda not to make photocopies in the Commission president’s office, ordered him not to go to the bank during working hours, and prohibited him from using his laptop.
The complaint alleged that on August 19, 2003, Rivera, the security guard, yelled at Miranda and threatened to attack him. The complaint also alleged that in September 2003, Charriez suspended Miranda from work for thirty days “for alleged acts of ... disturbing the peace and insubordi
*21
nation.” The district court dismissed Miranda’s claims against these three defendants on the ground that Miranda had failed to allege they acted under color of state law, as required in § 1983 actions.
See Cepero-Rivera v. Fagundo,
We disagree with the district court’s color of state law analysis, at least as to Pantojas and Charriez.
3
See Redondo-Borges v. U.S. Dep’t of Hous. & Urban Dev.,
The district court nonetheless was correct to dismiss the complaint. The complaint failed to plead other elements of a political discrimination claim, whether or not the attached evidentiary materials are considered. It is true, as Miranda argues, that there are no elevated pleading standards for civil rights cases.
See Educadores Puertorriqueños en Acción v. Hernández,
Here, Miranda failed to allege even the key elements of a political discrimination claim.
See Borges Colon v. Roman-Abreu,
Further, at least as to Pantojas and Rivera, Miranda failed to allege anything that could be termed an adverse employment action for purposes of a political discrimination claim.
See Rosario-Urdaz v. Velazco,
B. Dismissal of Defendant Rey
Miranda’s complaint stated that he filed criminal charges against Rivera after Rivera threatened him. The complaint alleged that at a subsequent hearing on those charges, Rey appeared on Rivera’s behalf and “divulged ... confidential and personal information” from Miranda’s personnel record.
The district court concluded that Miranda had properly alleged that Rey acted under color of state law. It found that Miranda’s claim nonetheless failed because he did not allege the other components of a political discrimination claim. We agree. Just as with the other defendants, Miranda’s claim against Rey failed to allege that plaintiff engaged in constitutionally protected political speech or association, that Rey belonged to a different political party, or that Rey knew of plaintiffs political beliefs. While Miranda did allege that Rey released his personnel records “with the intention of causing harm ... and in retaliation of his political believes [sic],” this is the sort of conclusory allegation, in the absence of any further facts in the complaint, which we have found insufficient to survive motions to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6).
See Redondo-Borges,
C. Miranda’s Leave-to-Amend Argu- ■ ment
Miranda never moved for leave to amend his complaint. He nevertheless argues that the district court should have, sua sponte, granted him time to amend his pleadings, and that it should have pushed ahead with any remaining discovery.
The contention is meritless. “Absent exceptional circumstances, a district court has no obligation to invite a plaintiff to amend his or her complaint when the plaintiff has not sought such amendment.”
United States ex rel. Karvelas v. Melrose-Wakefield Hosp.,
Further, discovery was conducted in the case. In Miranda’s request for reconsideration, he referred to details from Char-riez’s deposition testimony and attached the full 251-page deposition. 5 The district court did explicitly consider the evidence, which was undisputed. The court recount *23 ed the entirely legitimate reasons, as shown by the employment record, for Charriez’s decision to suspend plaintiff from his job and for Key’s decision to release information at the hearing. There was no evidence proffered to show that these were not the real reasons or were a pretext for political discrimination.
II.
In the end, the plaintiffs case failed not just because of loose pleading, or a failure to amend, but because the evidence showed he has no cognizable case. The district court was correct to end the matter.
Affirmed. Costs are awarded to defendants.
Notes
. The court’s initial order granting the motion to dismiss did not make reference to the evi-dentiary materials submitted by the defendants, but instead relied entirely on plaintiff’s complaint and analyzed the dismissal request under Rule 12(b)(6) standards.
. The district court dismissed the Commission as a defendant on grounds of Eleventh Amendment immunity. This ruling is not contested on appeal.
. The district court was on somewhat firmer ground as to Rivera, who was not a government employee.
See Logiodice v. Trs. of Me. Cent. Inst.,
.
Agosto-de-Feliciano
was decided before the Supreme Court decision in
Rutan,
which rejected as too stringent another court’s requirement
that such actions
be the "substantial equivalent of a dismissal,”
. Although the district court did not address the point, we view the motion for reconsideration as having been decided, by agreement, under Rule 56, given the presence of the attached evidentiary materials and the lack of objection to their being considered.
See
Fed R. Civ. P. 12(b);
see also Rodi v. S. New Eng. Sch. of Law,
