The prosecution and defense of criminal allegations produce ample opportunity for adversarial conflict. Without even looking for trouble, the interests of prosecution and defense can collide. This appeal demonstrates what can happen when one side steers those forces into direct and obvious conflict. Here, the prosecution’s desire to gather evidence for the re-trial of a high-profile murder case runs directly into a defense attorney’s right to consult with his client. The result is not a pretty picture. It is made all the worse because it appears to have been an entirely avoidable collision.
The case comes to us in the form of a civil rights damage action. Attorney Paul L. Gabbert (“Gabbert”) wishes to pursue the action against two deputy district attorneys, a police officer, and a court-appointed special master. He alleges violations of his Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment rights arising out of a search of his person and effects executed just moments before his client entered a grand jury room. The district court dismissed Gabbert’s Fourth Amendment claim and granted summary judgment for the defendants on, his Fourteenth Amendment claims. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
We hold that Gabbert had a clearly established right to pursue his profession without undue and unreasonable governmental interference and that no reasonable prosecutor or police officer could have believed that the worst of this conduct was lawful. We also hold that a second search of Gabbert, which violated both state law and the face of the warrant, amounted to a warrantless and therefore unreasonable search.
I. FACTS
Gabbert represented Traci Baker (“Baker”), a defense witness in the first murder trial of Lyle and Erik Menendez. 1 , After the close of evidence in that trial, Los Angeles County Deputy District Attorneys David Conn (“Conn”) and Carol Najera (“Najera”) learned that Lyle Menendez had written a letter to Baker in which he allegedly instructed her to testify falsely.
Armed with this information, Conn obtained a subpoena directing Baker to testify before a grand jury and produce any correspondence that'she had received from Lyle Menendez. Beverly Hills Police Department Detective Leslie''Zoeller (“Zoeller”), an investigating officer in the Menendez case, served that subpoena on Baker at Gabbert’s law office.
The next day, Gabbert sought to file a motion to quash that portion of the subpoena requiring Baker to produce correspondence from Menendez. A Los Angeles Superior Court Judge declined to accept Gabbert’s motion for filing and also denied his applica-. tion for an order shortening time for the hearing on the motion to quash.
At about this same time, Conn, Najera, and Zoeller obtained a warrant to search Baker’s apartment for any Menendez correspondence. When presented with the warrant, Baker informed Detective Zoeller that she had given any correspondence from Lyle Menendez to Gabbert. Zoeller relayed this information to Conn and Najera.
Three days later, Gabbert accompanied Baker to her scheduled grand jury appearance. As Gabbert and Baker walked into the building where the appearance was to take *798 place, Conn approached Gabbert and asked him if he had brought the “documents” with him. Conn was referring to the Menendez correspondence, but Gabbert thought Conn was referring to Gabbert’s motion to quash and accompanying documents.
Based on Gabbert’s response, Conn decided to obtain a warrant to search Gabbert and directed Detective Zoeller to secure it. Under California law, the search of an attorney or law office must be conducted by a court-appointed special master. In this instance, Elliot Oppenheim (“Oppenheim”), a retired lawyer, was authorized to search Gabbert and his effects.
As Baker and Gabbert were waiting outside the grand jury room, Zoeller, at Conn’s direction, served Gabbert with the search warrant. At Gabbert’s request, the search took place in a private room adjacent to the grand jury room. Before he was actually searched, Gabbert gave Oppenheim two photocopied pages of a three-page letter from Lyle Menendez to Baker, informing Oppen-heim that this was the only document on his person or in his effects that constituted correspondence between Menendez and Baker. Oppenheim proceeded to search Gabbert’s files, including at least two files that clearly involved clients other than and unrelated to Baker: When Gabbert protested, Oppen-heim proceeded to review the files anyway. Oppenheim also examined the contents of Gabbert’s briefcase, including his calendar, wallet, dictaphone, eyeglass case, and notepad.
Within minutes of the search warrant was being executed on Gabbert, Najera, also acting at Conn’s direction, called Baker before' the grand jury and began to question her. In response to the first question, Baker asked to leave the grand jury room to consult with her attorney. Gabbert, of course, was being searched at this very moment.
Conn’s secretary located Gabbert in the room where he was being searched and informed him that his client needed to speak with him. Gabbert, apparently unaware that his client was immediately outside the room, declined to leave. Instead he informed the secretary that the prosecution, which at least in his mind had created the problem, would have to simply delay questioning Baker further while the search was being carried out.
Baker then returned to the grand jury room and, reading off a card she had prepared in advance, asserted her Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination on “the advice of counsel.” In response to a second question from Najera, Baker again asked to speak with her attorney and left the room. Gabbert was nowhere to be seen. Baker waited in the hallway until a bailiff appeared, telling her to return to the grand jury room where she once again asserted her Fifth Amendment privilege.
Conn thereupon moved to hold Baker in contempt for failing to produce the documents subject to the subpoena, and the grand jury took a break. Conn, Najera, and Zoeller, with Baker in tow, then joined Op-penheim and Gabbert in the room where Oppenheim had just searched Gabbert. Op-penheim informed Conn that Gabbert did not possess the materials subject to the search warrant, but that Gabbert’s effects did not contain privileged matters. Gabbert disputed this statement and informed Conn that he had files of other clients as well as privileged matters concerning Baker (e.g., Gabbert’s notes of his interview with Baker). Conn thereupon informed Gabbert that Detective Zoeller would conduct a follow-up search of Gabbert’s person and effects. Gabbert neither consented to nor resisted this search which was carried out by Zoeller with Conn and Najera looking on. Oppenheim took no part in this second search.
II. PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Gabbert contends his Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures and his Fourteenth Amendment right to practice his profession without unreasonable governmental interference were both violated. The district court dismissed his Fourth Amendment claims, finding that Zoeller and Oppenheim had absolute immunity and Conn and Najera had qualified immunity. The district court found that Zoeller, as a public officer executing a court order, had quasi-judicial immunity and that Oppen-heim was immune from suit as a judicial *799 officer performing a judicial function. The district court declined to give the deputy district attorneys absolute immunity because it found they were acting as investigators, not advocates, during the search and grand jury proceeding. Finally, the district court denied the defendants’ motion to dismiss Gabbert’s Fourteenth Amendment claims.
The district court denied Gabbert’s motion for leave to amend his complaint to include a state law claim under California Penal Code § 1524(c), the statute regulating the search of lawyers or law offices. The district court declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over a civil claim based on a violation of CaLPenal Code § 1524, finding that it presented a novel question of state law which would substantially predominate over Gab-bert’s remaining Fourteenth Amendment claims.
The defendants moved for summary judgment on Gabbert’s Fourteenth Amendment claims. The district court granted summary judgment for Conn and Najera based on qualified immunity and for Zoeller and Op-penheim based on absolute immunity.
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Both a dismissal for failure to state a claim and a grant of summary judgment on the basis of qualified immunity in a 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action are reviewed de novo.
Crow Tribe of Indians v. Racicot,
IV. ANALYSIS
“To sustain an action under section 1983, a plaintiff must show (1) that the conduct complained of was committed by a person acting under color of state law; and (2) that the conduct deprived the plaintiff of a federal constitutional or statutory right.”
Wood v. Ostrander,
Absolute immunity, a total defense at the outset to a civil rights action, is afforded to those officials performing special functions that require independence and fearless performance.
See Burns v. Reed,
The qualified immunity doctrine protects government officials from civil liability under § 1983 “insofar as their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.”
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
When the underlying facts are undisputed, the district court must decide whether a public officer is entitled to qualified immunity “at the earliest possible point in the litigation.”
Act Up!/Portland v. Bagley, 988
F.2d 868, 873 (9th Cir.1993) (interpreting
*800
Hunter v. Bryant,
A. FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT CLAIM
1. Immunity of the Prosecutors a. Absolute Immunity
Conn and Najera claim that absolute immunity protects them from liability for Gabbert’s § 1983 claims. Prosecutors are entitled to absolute immunity from suit under § 1983 for conduct “intimately associated with the judicial phase of the criminal process.”
Imbler v. Pachtman,
Prosecutors are entitled to absolute immunity for initiating and pursuing prosecution.
See Imbler,
Gabbert claims Conn and Najera violated his constitutional rights by their timing of the service of the search warrant and directing the second search. The district court found that Conn and Najera acted as investigators, not advocates, by participating or directing the pre-indictment gathering of evidence. The district court’s determination in this regard is on solid ground, as the prosecutors here performed activities more associated with police functions: they served a search warrant upon Gabbert’s client at her residence, directed a police officer to obtain a search warrant for Gabbert, were present when the police officer served the warrant to Gabbert, introduced Gabbert to the special master, informed Gabbert of the need' for a second search, were present for the second search, and viewed Gabbert’s documents during the search. Thus, the district court properly found that prosecutors Conn and Najera were not entitled to absolute immunity for their actions.
b. Qualified Immunity
Alternatively, Conn and Najera claim they are entitled to qualified immunity. The threshold question in resolving such a claim is whether the plaintiff has identified a specific right allegedly violated by government actors.
See Newell,
The Fourteenth Amendment protects “the right of the individual ... to engage in any of the common occupations of life.”
Board of Regents v. Roth,
Having identified the specific right at issue, we turn to whether that right was clearly established at the time the prosecutors allegedly interfered with that right.
See Anderson v. Creighton,
A right is clearly established “[i]f the only reasonable conclusion from binding authority [was] that the disputed right existed.”
Blueford v. Prunty,
The unusual facts of this case preclude “the very action in question” to be clearly established in our case law. Nevertheless, long-standing precedent establishes the importance of the attorney-client relationship during a client’s grand jury testimony. A witness has an absolute duty to answer all questions before a grand jury.
See United States v. Mandujano,
A constitutional right may be clearly established “both by common sense and by precedent.”
Newell,
The final step in a qualified immunity analysis is whether a reasonable official could have believed the conduct at issue was lawful under that clearly' established law.
See Mendoza,
Here, two streams of events collided. The prosecutors were poised with a search warrant for Gabbert’s effects to be carried out by a special master pursuant to California procedure. Baker, as required by her grand jury subpoena, was present and prepared to appear before the grand jury. The prosecutors were in control of both events: they controlled the timing of the execution of the search warrant on. Gabbert and his client’s grand jury appearance. The only apparent reason to have both occur at the same time was the prosecutors’ desire to prevent Gab-bert from communicating with his client.
There was a clear and obvious path that, if followed, would have allowed the prosecutors to both execute the search warrant as well as permit Baker to appear before the grand jury with Gabbert available for consultation. The prosecutors could have simply delayed Baker’s grand jury appearance while the special master searched Gabbert and his files. Baker would have had no right to be present when Gabbert was searched and therefore could have been kept ■ comfortably out of harm’s way. Alternatively, the prosecutors could have delayed the search of Gabbert until his client was finished testifying before the grand jury.
The prosecutors chose instead to pursue a path that put these two events into direct conflict, executing the search warrant on Gabbert at almost the exact time Baker was being haled into the grand jury room. 3 The plain and intended result was to prevent Gabbert from consulting with Baker during *803 her grand jury appearance. 4 These actions were not objectively reasonable, and thus the prosecutors are not protected by qualified immunity from answering Gabbert’s Fourteenth Amendment claim. 5
Our holding does not provide a basis for a private attorney to resist legitimate criminal procedure and litigation devices — such, as search warrants or discovery requests — in cases against the government. Nor does our holding transform every violation of a client’s constitutional rights into a corresponding violation of an attorney’s constitutional rights. Rather, our holding is narrow: a state government violates an attorney’s Fourteenth Amendment rights when its officers unduly and unreasonably interfere with the attorney’s right to practice his profession by preventing the attorney from offering legal assistance to the client in the very matter and at the very moment for which the lawyer was retained.
2. Immunity of the Detective
Detective Zoeller claims absolute immunity from Gabbert’s § 1983 claim for violating his Fourteenth Amendment rights. Zoeller relies on
Coverdell v. Department of Social and Health Servs.,
As discussed above, Gabbert had a clearly established right to practice his profession free from undue and unreasonable governmental interference. Thus, our focus turns to whether a reasonable police officer could have believed this conduct was lawful.
We find Detective Zoeller’s conduct objectively reasonable. The warrant at issue expressly stated that it could “be served at any time of the day or night.” Zoeller served the warrant on Gabbert at the direction of Conn. Most importantly, Zoeller had no control over the timing of the prosecutors’ calling Baker to the grand jury room. Therefore, Zoeller is entitled to qualified immunity from Gabbert’s Fourteenth Amendment claim.
3. Immunity of the Special Master
Special Master Oppenheim also claims absolute quasi-judicial immunity. Judicial immunity may be extended to officials other than judges when “their judgments are functionally comparable to those of judges— that is, because they, too, exercise a discretionary judgment as part of their function.”
Antoine v. Byers & Anderson, Inc.,
Oppenheim exercised discretionary judgment as part of his function. California Penal Code § 1524(c)(1) expressly calls upon the “judgment of the special master.” Moreover, § 1524 requires the special master to assess the relevance of any items he examines and to determine whether the party served complied with the warrant. These “discretionary judgments” are functionally comparable to those a judge would make in the absence of a special master.
Antoine,
B. FOURTH AMENDMENT CLAIM
1. Immunity of the Prosecutors
Gabbert claims that deputy district attorneys Conn and Najera violated his Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable searches when they engaged in an impermissible second search of his person and possessions without a valid warrant and failed to comply with California Penal Code § 1524.
For the reasons stated above, we reject the prosecutors’ claim to absolute immunity. We must determine whether the prosecutors are entitled to qualified immunity.
Searches of attorneys and their offices, of course, are ripe with potential for controversy. Conducted without restraint, legitimate privileges and privacy expectations, including those of uninvolved third parties, can be violated. For this and other sensible policy reasons, California law wisely requires that such searches be carried out by special masters and that disputes over what may or may not be seized be taken promptly before a trial judge for resolution. Cal.Penal Code § 1524;
see People v. Superior Court,
We cannot accept, however, Gab-bert’s claim that the prosecutors’ alleged violation of Cal.Penal Code §. 1524 is actionable under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. State law cannot form the basis of a § 1983 claim unless the violation of that law also results in a constitutional or federal law violation.
See Vargas-Badillo v. Diaz-Torres,
Gabbert also alleges, however, that the prosecutors violated his Fourth Amendment rights by searching or participating in a search of his personal effects without a valid or lawful warrant.
We agree with the district court that the search warrant authorizing Special Master Oppenheim to search Gabbert was valid.
See United States v. Cannon,
Although a state law violation is not actionable in a § 1983 claim, federal courts must necessarily consider the lawfulness of a search under state law.
See Pierce v. Multnomah County, Or.,
*805 The California law governing the search of attorneys for documentary evidence permits only the special master to conduct the search. Cal.Penal Code § 1524(e). The statute forbids the party seeking or serving the warrant from participating in the search except upon the agreement of the party being searched. See id. The prosecutors knew of the statute’s requirements and thus directed Detective Zoeller to obtain a search warrant pursuant to that statute. The search warrant stated that Detective Zoeller would search Gabbert “through Special Master Elliot Oppenheim.” Neither California law nor the face of the search warrant authorized the prosecutors to participate in the second search of Gabbert without his consent. Thus, the second search was warrantless.
The prosecutors argue that the second search was not warrantless because it was a continuation of the first search under a valid warrant. It is true that courts have allowed second searches under the same warrant, as long as the subsequent search could be considered a continuation of the first search.
See United States v. Kaplan,
Qualified immunity from civil liability can extend to officials'who perform unlawful war-rantless searches.
See Barlow v. Ground,
Conn was clearly aware that California law permitted only a special master to search Gabbert. He directed Detective Zoel-ler to add to the existing affidavit and to secure a search warrant for Gabbert’s person and effects. Both the affidavit and the search warrant stated that the search would be conducted by Special Master Oppenheim pursuant to § 1524. In viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the non-moving party,
see Bagdadi v. Nazar,
Although a reasonable prosecutor in Najera’s position might also know that the second search was unlawful, the evidence does not show that she was sufficiently involved in the second search to be liable under § 1983. She neither directed the detective to obtain the search warrant nor instructed him to conduct the warrantless second search. Her mere presence during the second search does not arise to a violation of either federal or state law. We therefore affirm the district court’s dismissal of Gabbert’s Fourth’ Amendment claim against Najera.
2. Immunity of the Detective
Gabbert asserts similar Fourth Amendment violations against Detective Zoeller. A police officer does not enjoy abso
*806
lute immunity from suit for conducting a search but may be protected by qualified immunity.
See Liston v. County of Riverside,
The evidence compels the conclusion that a reasonable officer in Zoeller’s situation could not have believed that his conduct was lawful. In his affidavit, Zoeller requested the appointment of a special master pursuant to § 1524 “to assist in the search of Mr. Gab-bert’s documents.” He stated that this fulfilled the requirements of the statute. The search warrant issued by the magistrate authorized the special master, not Zoeller, to conduct the search. Clearly, Zoeller knew of the existence of § 1524 and its special master requirement. A reasonable officer would know, not only the existence of the law, but also its general requirements. Detective Zoeller cannot escape liability from Gabbert’s claim by asserting ignorance of the substance of the governing law. Therefore, a reasonable detective would know, from the applicable law and from the face of the search warrant, that he was not authorized to search Gabbert. We conclude that Zoeller does not have qualified immunity from Gabbert’s Fourth Amendment claim.
3. Immunity of the Special Master
Gabbert claims that Special Master Oppenheim violated his Fourth Amendment rights by conducting an overbroad search. Oppenheim enjoys absolute immunity for all activities performed pursuant to his role as special master.
See Atkinson-Baker & Assocs.,
C. SUPPLEMENTAL JURISDICTION OF THE DISTRICT COURT
Because the district court’s denial of Gab-bert’s motion for leave to amend his complaint to include a cause of action under Cal.Penal Code § 1524 was based, in part, on its dismissal of Gabbert’s Fourth Amendment-claims, we assume, without deciding the issue, that the district court will want to revisit this ruling.
V. CONCLUSION
In the procedural posture this case comes to us, we are necessarily limited. Only the fullness of discovery and perhaps a trial on the merits can fully explore Gabbert’s claims and- the defendants’ defenses. Defendants may be able to establish that, whatever they did, it did not materially affect Gabbert’s rights. We can only say that Gabbert’s claims merit full exposition and defendants’ defenses complete exploration.
The order granting summary judgment to prosecutors Conn and Najera on Gabbert’s Fourteenth Amendment claims is REVERSED. The order granting summary judgment to Detective Zoeller and Special Master Oppenheim on Gabbert’s Fourteenth Amendment claims is AFFIRMED. The dismissal of Gabbert’s Fourth Amendment claims against Conn and Zoeller is REVERSED. The dismissal of Gabbert’s Fourth Amendment claims against Najera and Oppenheim is AFFIRMED.
The case is remanded to the district court for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion. Each party to bear its own costs. The panel retains jurisdiction over further appeals of this matter.
Notes
. The events at issue in this appeal occurred during jury deliberations of the first Menendez trial, which ultimately resulted in two hung juries.
. The prosecutors seek to characterize Gabbert’s claim as one for lost professional opportunities or injury to his professional reputation. Injury to a professional reputation is not a liberty interest protected by the Fourteenth Amendment.
See Siegert v. Gilley,
. We have had occasion to describe the “model of government sensitivity to the special privacy interests that are implicated when a law firm’s files must be searched” pursuant to a warrant.
See In re Grand Jury Subpoenas Dated December 10, 1987,
From the time the warrants were requested, the officers took considerable care in minimizing the intrusion into the privacy of the Doe Four law firm. The Government intentionally timed the search for a time of day when it would least disrupt the law firm’s activities. The Government also suggested to the issuing court that it impose any special restrictions on the execution of the warrants it deemed appropriate in light of the facts that the files in a law office would be searched.
The execution of the warrants, likewise, shows considerable concern for the privacy interests of the law firm and its clients. At the main office, the agents delayed the search while law firm attorneys negotiated with the United States Attorney as to the best way to meet the Government’s need for these documents. An agreement was reached that the officers would not conduct a search of the files. Instead, law firm personnel searched the files and identified the relevant documents. These documents were sealed and turned over to the district court.
At the satellite office, the officers seized the files bearing the names of the persons identified in the warrant, without reviewing the contents. These documents were sealed and delivered to the district court.
As the result of these precautions, the privacy interests of the persons subject to the search were fully protected.
Id. (emphasis added). Although we do not prescribe a specific method for executing a search warrant on a lawyer or law office, we note that prosecutors Conn and Najera miserably failed to achieve the cooperative attitude exhibited in this model.
. The prosecutors’ counsel conceded at oral argument that the only reason for the timing of the search was "to take advantage” of this situation.
. We are unpersuaded by the prosecutors’ argument that their actions were objectively reasonable because they had no reason to know that Baker did not, in fact, consult with Gabbert when she left the grand jury room. It is true that, upon Baker’s return to the grand jury room, she invoked her privilege against self-incrimination on "the advice of counsel.” Baker’s prepared statement, however, does
not
make the prosecutors’ actions objectively reasonable. At best, the prosecutors had to know that Gabbert was distracted from giving his full attention and advice to Baker. This distraction prevented Gab-bert from practicing his profession “according to the highest standards.”
Keker,
. Although the law affords absolute immunity to Special Master Oppenheim, it should be noted that he violated several provisions of the California statute regulating the execution of a search of an attorney. See Cal.Penal Code § 1524. Additionally, his decision that Gabbert’s flies contained no privileged material because the documents were not stamped or marked "privileged” is contrary to even the most basic understanding of the attorney-client privilege.
