INTRODUCTION
T1 This case began with a telephone call for police assistance by a private alarm company. In time, this single call led to a misdemeanor prosecution and then this civil lawsuit. The call was made after a number of teenage girls set off burglar alarms at a Salt Lake City high school. Salt Lake City police concluded the caller, Michael Jeffrey Howe, violated a state statute criminalizing the making of a false alarm and charged him accordingly. Mr. Howe stated in the call that a Peak Alarm security guard had verified the break in. In reality it was a school employee who had confirmed the alarm and requested the alarm company summon police. The single-count criminal prosecution concluded with a directed verdict in Mr. Howe's favor in the Salt Lake City Justice *1229 Court. Following the acquittal, Mr. Howe sued Salt Lake City along with several police department employees and administrators.
T2 This appeal concerns that civil litigation. Mr. Howe alleges the district court committed reversible error in ruling on three motions. First, Mr. Howe challenges the district court's rejection of his motion for partial summary judgment. Mr. Howe attempted to use the directed verdict in his criminal prosecution as a predicate for summary judgment on the issue of probable cause, which was part of several of his claims. The district court concluded that the directed verdict and surrounding cireum-stances failed to prove police acted without probable cause in charging Mr. Howe. See-ond, Mr. Howe asserts the district court erred in dismissing his stаte claims when it granted Salt Lake City's motion for summary judgment based on procedural requirements imposed by the Utah Governmental Immunity Act (UGIA). Finally, Mr. Howe argues the district court erred in granting Salt Lake City's motion for summary judgment on his claims of civil rights violations arising under federal law. In all, the district court dismissed seven independent claims arising in federal law on the basis of qualified immunity, pleading errors by Mr. Howe, and deficiencies in connecting Salt Lake City and several supervisors to any constitutional deprivation by individual officers and employees.
13 We affirm the district court's holding that the directed verdict in Mr. Howe's erimi-nal trial is not conclusive evidence that the city acted without probable cause. Also, the district court correctly rejected Mr. Howe's alternative argument by holding that all the facts before the court did not prove Salt Lake City acted without probable cause. However, we reverse the district court's grant of summary judgment in favor of Salt Lake City on Mr. Howe's state law claims. Summary judgment arising under the UGIA was in error because Mr. Howe provided a sufficient and timely notice of claims. As to Mr. Howe's federal claims alleging civil rights violations, the district court erred in dismissing Mr. Howe's Fourth Amendment seizure claim because Mr. Howe presented facts that supported a claim that an unlawful seizure did occur and that officers lacked probable cause to support the seizure. We affirm the district court's dismissal of Mr. Howe's remaining six civil rights claims.
BACKGROUND
I. SALT LAKE CITY'S VERIFIED RESPONSE ORDINANCE
T4 While this civil case is based on the events surrounding Mr. Howe's call to police on June 27, 2003, Mr. Howe alleges his prosecution was rootеd in a long-standing acrimonious relationship between Peak Alarm and the Salt Lake City Police Department. The hostility, Mr. Howe alleges, began years earlier as the police department grew concerned over resources expended in responding to false alarms reported by private alarm companies. In response to police complaints that calls from private security firms were a waste of police resources, Salt Lake City officials enacted the verified response ordinance in December 2000. The ordinance precludes a police response to an "intrusion" alarm reported by a private security company without on-site verification from an alarm company employee. Salt Lake City Ordinance 5.08.095.
T5 In addition to instituting the verified response policy within Salt Lake City, Shanna Werner, the department's alarm administrator, was occasionally quoted in trade publications as well as local and national media reports about the city's efforts to manage alarm company calls. Ms. Werner also spoke to city officials in other Utah communities about the program. As part of her public comments on the issue, Ms. Werner criticized the alarm industry as earning profits without providing any services, wasting public resources, and for preying on the fears of potential customers. Mr. Howe became part of this public debate as well. Most notably, in 2003 he became chair of a committee formed by the Utah Alarm Associa *1230 tion to lobby against the adoptiоn of the verified response policy by other cities in Utah.
II. BURGLAR ALARMS AND MR. HOWE'S CALL TO POLICE DISPATCH
1 6 In the early morning hours of June 27, 2003, the lunchroom staff arrived at West High School and began preparing meals for a summer lunch program. - A supervisor turned off the security alarm in the lunchroom, cafeteria, and an adjacent hallway. She left the motion-activated alarms on in the rest of the school. Shortly before 9 a.m. the still-activated alarms went off. Two staff members reported two girls had entered the school and gone up to the second level. The supervisor called Peak Alarm. She asked Peak Alarm to send police because she "wanted to make sure [the girls] weren't up to some mischief" and no one on the lunchroom staff was "trained to deal with intruders." In an affidavit submitted in this case, the supervisor stated police never questioned her about the girls and what transpired in the school, but focused only on the information she gave to Peak Alarm.
T7 Following a telephone conversation with the supervisor, a Peak Alarm employee called the Salt Lake City Police dispatch and requested police respond to a "burglar alarm." The police dispatcher refused to send officers to the school and added police would only be sent after school employees "called us from the school and asked us to help remove them." The Peak Alarm employee's subsequent attempts to contact the supervisor and other school officials were unsuccessful. The Peak Alarm employee apprised Mr. Howe, who was the alarm сompany's central station manager, of the situation. Mr. Howe then called police dispatch himself. The following conversation ensued:
Mr. Howe: Hey, we have an actual burglar alarm going off at West High, and I guess my dispatcher just called up and said you guys weren't going to go on an actual burglar alarm?
Police dispatch: No, we don't go on burglar-we haven't gone on burglar alarms for two years.
Mr. Howe: This is an actual burglary in progress, it's been verified.
Police dispatch: No, [the Peak Alarm employee] didn't say that, she said it was an alarm.
Mr. Howe: ... We actually have people inside and my guard is asking for police assistance.
Police dispatch: Okay, that's what I needed.
[[Image here]]
Police dispatch: Okay, and how many, how many?
Mr. Howe: They said two or three kids.
Police dispatch: Where at?
Mr. Howe: Didn't get that information just the alarm's coming from the second floor, but they're running throughout the whole building.
[[Image here]]
Police dispatch: And where do we meet your guard at?
Mr. Howe: Just in front of the school.
Police dispatch: Is he in uniform or she?
Mr. Howe: Yes, he is.
T8 Over the course of the day, there were a number of additional conversations between Mr. Howe and dispatchers and a police officer to clarify what information had been conveyed to Peak Alarm, whether this was a panic alarm or a burglary alarm, and the status of the security guard. In these subsequent conversations, Mr. Howe readily acknowledged that he had assumed that a seeu-rity guard from Peak Alarm had confirmed the unauthorized entry and that it was the guard who had requested police assistance. The most significant of these later conversations came in two interviews conducted by Salt Lake City Police Officer Shaun Wihongi. In the first interview, Officer Wihongi reported Mr. Howe claimed he was led "to *1231 believe" the school employees "were in imminent danger" and he was unhappy that police refused to go to the scene after the initial call for police assistance. When asked why he made the specific statements about the security guard, Mr. Howe told Officer Wihongi, "[Wlhatever it takes, I thought this was a panic alarm." In the second interview which Officer Wihongi recorded-Mr. Howe reiterated that he believed school employees were in danger because "they had unauthorized people within the building that should not have been in there.... [Slomeone's life could potentially be in danger." Mr. Howe also stated, "If we're even charged for a false alarm, I don't care. I was just-hey, charge us if you have to, we'll be glad to pay it."
III. MR. HOWE'S CRIMINAL CITATION AND PROSECUTION
19 Over the next few weeks, Mr. Howe attempted to contact Ms. Werner to discuss the police response to the high school. Ms. Werner did not return Mr. Howe's calls and felt "listening to more rhetoric was unnecessary." It wasn't until July 14, 2003, when Sgt. James Bryant met with Ms. Werner, that police began considering criminal charges against Mr. Howe. In considering charges, Sgt. Bryant focused on the information Mr. Howe provided to police dispatch. "The false information provided was that an employee or agent of Peak Alarm was on the scene, and that the employee or agent either had contact with or knowledge of unauthorized persons on the premises." In his review, Sgt. Bryant also noted Mr. Howe's "whatever it takes" statement to Officer Wi-hongi.
{10 Sgt. Bryant decided a false alarm charge was appropriate because Sgt. Bryant judged Mr. Howe "knew [the statements] to be false, and that his intent in doing that was to elicit a response from the Police Department." On July 21, 2008, Sgt. Bryant and another officer went to Peak Alarm's offices. After summoning Mr. Howe to the lobby area, Sgt. Bryant told Mr. Howe he was going to be arrested for making a false alarm. Rather than handcuffing Mr. Howe and taking him into police custody, Sgt. Bryant gave Mr. Howe the opportunity to avoid an arrest by signing and fingerprinting a citation for the misdemeanor of making a false alarm. The fingerprinting process was not equivalent to that used at a formal booking; Sgt. Bryant required a single thumbprint affixed to the citation. Police department policy requires that every misdemeanor citation include a fingerprint from the cited individual.
{11 A jury trial on the criminal charge began on April 12, 2004. Following the Salt Lake City prosecutor's case in chief, the justice court granted Mr. Howe's motion for a directed verdict. The justice court dismissed the charge because prosecutors presented "no evidence" Mr. Howe "knowingly or intentionally made ... a false alarm."
IV. MR. HOWE'S CIVIL SUIT
{12 On June 25, 2004, Mr. Howe filed a notice of claim with Salt Lake City. In the eight-page notice, Mr. Howe presented a number of claims arising under the federal and state constitutions, as well as state law. A complaint was filed on April 7, 2005. In all, Mr. Howe lodged ten causes of action against five named parties-Salt Lake City; the Police Chief; the Assistant Police Chief; Set. Bryant; and Ms. Werner. Mr. Howe's ten claims consisted of: (1) false arrest/false imprisonment; (2) malicious prosecution; (8) violation of the Utah Citizen Participation in Government Act; (4) tortious interference with existing and prospective business relations; 1 (5) intentionаl infliction of emotional distress; (6) conspiracy to violate constitutional rights; (7) defamation; (8) negligence; (9) deprivation of federal constitutional rights *1232 under 42 U.S.C. § 1983; 2 and (10) violations under the Utah Constitution.
113 The parties filed cross motions for summary judgment in the district court. Mr. Howe moved for partial summary judgment on the claims of false arrest and malicious prosecution, 3 arguing that the justice court's finding that Salt Lake City presented "no evidence" of Mr. Howe's intent to violate the false-alarm statute conclusively established that the city lacked probable cause to arrest and charge Mr. Howe. Alternatively, Mr. Howe argued that the surrounding cireum-stances proved Sgt. Bryant lacked probable cause. The district court denied the motion, holding Mr. Howe had failed to prove that the facts known to Sgt. Bryant could not cause a prudent officer to believe an offense had occurred.
14 The district court then turned its attention to the motion for summary judgment filed by Salt Lake City. First, Salt Lake City argued for summary judgment on Mr. Howe's state claims based on procedural grounds under the UGIA. The district court granted the motion and dismissed all but one of Mr. Howe's state claims under the UGIA's procedural mandates 4 Second, Salt Lake City attacked Mr. Howe's claims arising under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Again, the district court dismissed all of these claims on the basis of qualified immunity, pleading defects, and the law of respondeat superior and supervisor liability in civil rights cases.
115 Mr. Howe has appealed the district court's decisions on these motions,. This court has jurisdiction pursuant to Utah Code section 78A-3-102(8)(j) (2008).
ANALYSIS
116 A grant of summary judgment is proper when there is no genuine issue as to any matеrial fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Utah R. Civ. P. 56(c). "When reviewing a grant of summary judgment, 'we evaluate the evidence and all reasonable inferences fairly drawn from that evidence in a light most favorable to the party opposing summary judgment.
5
Fishbough v. Utah Power & Light,
I. THE DIRECTED VERDICT IS NOT CONCLUSIVE EVIDENCE AND THE TOTALITY OF EVIDENCE FAILS TO SHOW A LACK OF PROBABLE CAUSE AS A MATTER OF LAW; THE DISTRICT COURT CORRECTLY DENIED MR. HOWE'S MOTION FOR PARTIAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT
117 Mr. Howe argues he is entitled to a grant of summary judgment on his false *1233 arrest and malicious prosecution claims because Sgt. Bryant and Ms. Werner lacked probable cause to arrest Mr. Howe and have him prosecuted. Specifically, Mr. Howe urges us to find error in the district court's evaluation of probable cause leading to Sgt. Bryant's decision to cite and have Mr. Howe prosecuted for making a false alarm. Mr. Howe's argument takes two forms. First, he contends that the justice court's directed ver-diet in the criminal case obligated the district court in this case to grant his motion under principles of collateral estoppel. Second, he argues that the directed verdict, coupled with the surrounding cireumstances, mandates summary judgment in his favor. We disagree.
A. The Justice Court's "No Evidence" Finding Is Evidence of a Lack of Probable Cause, But Is Not Conclusive Evidence That Mandates Collateral Estop-pel
{18 At oral argument, Mr. Howe's principal argument was that he was entitled to summary judgment solely because Salt Lake City should be collaterally estopped from contesting whether its employees had probаble cause to arrest and prosecute him. The exclusive basis of this claim was that despite the opportunity and motivation to introduce evidence showing Mr. Howe knowingly made a false alarm at the criminal trial, Salt Lake City presented "no evidence" of Mr. Howe's criminal intent. Mr. Howe asserts Salt Lake City's inability to present any evidence on his intent to make a false alarm in the justice court is conclusive evidence that Sgt. Bryant and Ms. Werner lacked probable cause to arrest and prosecute him.
119 Mr. Howe's argument overlooks the differences in proof required in eriminal and civil proceedings. In every criminal case, the law places the burden of proof on the prosecution to prove every element of the charged offense beyond a reasonable doubt. Utah Code Ann. § 76-1-501(1) (2008). In contrast, to prevail in his civil litigation, Mr. Howe must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that Sgt. Bryant and Ms. Werner acted without probable cause. See Johns v. Shulsen,
€20 Our legal system turns on what level of proof is required and what party bears that burden. There is significant distance between the burdens imposed in the criminal context and the civil setting. That distance matters. "[The failure of the State to prove the elements of the charged crime beyond a reasonable doubt cannot logically estop another fact finder ... from finding that those same elements were proven by a prеponderance of the evidence." Id. (holding an acquittal in a eriminal case cannot preclude a finding that the same individual violated his parole because a parole hearing is a civil action).
121 Mr. Howe, however, contends the burden of proof is immaterial here because the justice court found Salt Lake City failed to present any evidence that Mr. Howe knowingly made a false alarm. This argument misses the point. Although Salt Lake City prosecutors were unable to present evidence at trial on the mens rea element of the charged offense, the justice court's finding says nothing about the state of the evidence at the time Sgt. Bryant elected to issue Mr. Howe the citation. The law recognizes that facts, evidence, and inferences made at the time of arrest or in the initial stages of a prosecution may change or even disappear as a case proceeds to trial, See State v. Standiford,
[ 22 We are therefore unpersuaded by Mr. Howe's argument that the justice court's decision should estop Salt Lake City from arguing that probable cause existed to arrest and prosecute him. The outcome in the criminal case, standing alone, is not conclusive evidence demanding the application of collateral estoppel. It is, at best, some evidence of a lack of probable cause for an arrest or prosecution that should be considered as part of a larger analysis of the totality of the cireum-stances.
6
See Olson v. Indep. Order of Foresters,
B. When the Facts Are Taken in Their Emtirety and in a Light Most Favorable to the Defendants, Mr. Howe Failed to Prove Sgt. Bryant Acted Without Probable Cause
123 Given that the justice court's decision is not conclusive evidence of a lack of probable cause, we turn to Mr. Howe's alternative argument that no probable cause existed under the totality of the cireumstances as a matter of law. Probable cause is often the critical issue in litigation involving false arrest and malicious prosecution. See Terry v. Zions Coop. Mercantile Inst.,
124 Given this consistency, our de-seription of probable cause justifying an arrest and prosecution mirrors the standard derived from the Fourth Amendment. See Trane,
125 Utah's false alarm statute renders a person criminally liable for making a false alarm by reporting a crime or catаstrophe while "knowing that the report or warning is false or baseless." Utah Code Ann. § 76-9-105(1). When Mr. Howe called police on June 27, 2003, he falsely reported that a private security guard was at the school and *1235 had verified a burglary. Mr. Howe, however, argues that this false statement is not equivalent to a false alarm contemplated in section 76-9-105; he points out that he did not report a false alarm, as a burglary had in fact occurred. Mr. Howe merely reported-albeit falsely-who had verified the crime. This argument is not without merit. The false alarm statute does not stand for the proposition that a person is subject to erimi-nal prosecution by making any factual misstatements when they call for police assistance. - Rather, section 76-9-105 clearly criminalizes the act of reporting a crime with the knowledge that no crime existed.
{26 Nonetheless, other facts in this case raise questions with regard to probable cause. Mr. Howe told police dispatch that a security guard had verified the burglary. He knew that police would not otherwise respond. From his lobbying activities, Mr. Howe knew the content of the Salt Lake City ordinance. And Mr. Howe's own employee had been told by a police dispatcher, minutes earlier, that police would not respond to unverified burglar alarms by an alarm company. Additionally, Mr. Howe's own "whatever it takes" statement could be interpreted by a prudent officer as meaning that Mr. Howe would say anything necessary to persuade police to respond to a mere burglary alarm regardless of whether he bеlieved an actual burglary had occurred. Finally, there are inconsistencies in Mr. Howe's initial statements. Mr. Howe told police dispatch that there was a burglary in progress. By the time Mr. Howe was interviewed by police, he claimed he was reporting a "panic alarm" based on a theory that "someone's life could potentially be in danger." Given these facts, we cannot conclude as a matter of law that a prudent officer would not have been justified in concluding Mr. Howe reported a crime while knowing it was false.
{27 This does not mean there are no facts suggesting Sgt. Bryant and Ms. Werner acted without probable cause. Indeed, in Part III we discuss these facts thoroughly. But, given that we must view the facts in a light most favorable to Salt Lake City-the non-moving party on this motion-we conclude the district court did not err in rejecting Mr. Howe's motion for partial summary judgment.
II THE DISTRICT COURT ERRED WHEN IT DISMISSED MR. HOWE'S CLAIMS ON PROCEDURAL GROUNDS ARISING UNDER THE UTAH GOVERNMENTAL IMMUNITY ACT
128 Mr. Howe next argues that the district court misapplied the procedural requirements of the UGIA to dismiss his state claims. Specifically, Mr. Howe argues the district court erred when it held (1) Mr. Howe failed to sufficiently plead that Sgt. Bryant or Ms. Werner acted with fraud or malice, and (2) Mr. Howe failed to file a sufficiently pled notice of claim within the statutorily mandated time period required by the UGIA.
A. Mr. Howe's Notice of Claim Included Sufficient Allegations that the Government Employees Acted with Fraud or Malice
129 Generally, the UGIA operates to shield government employees from liability for tortious acts that occur during the course of employment. See Mecham v. Frazier,
130 The UGIA's notice-of-claim requirement does not demand "that such notices meet the standards required to state a claim for relief" Houghton v. Dep't of Health,
131 Mr. Howe delivered an eight-page notice of claim to the Salt Lake City recorder on June 25, 2004. The district court found this notice of claim failed to assert any claims of fraud or malice and made only "general conclusory statements." We disagree with this characterization. Mr. Howe's notice of claim provided facts alleging malice by Ms. Werner and Sgt. Bryant. For instance, Mr. Howe alleged that Sgt. Bryant lacked facts to support a "good faith" arrest of Mr. Howe. Also, Mr. Howe asserted the purpose of the prosecution was not to bring a criminal to justice but to punish Mr. Howe for his public opposition to Salt Lake City's verified response policy. Moreover, Mr. Howe employed the term malice in his notice of claim when he alleged Salt Lake City acted "for the purpose of harassing, intimidating, punishing, or otherwise maliciously inhibiting" Mr. Howe's constitutional rights. (Emphasis added.) Finally, Mr. Howe alleged that Ms. Werner, with the support of her supervisors, "mounted a wideranging and public campaign that features exaggerated, misleading and/or false statements against the alarm industry itself and individuals within the industry."
32 These claims were sufficient to alert Salt Lake City that Mr. Howe intended to bring claims against the police department's employees on the basis of malicious conduct within the scope of employment. Therefore, the district court erred in holding that Mr. Howe failed to allege fraud or malice in his June 25, 2004 notice of claim filed with Salt Lake City.
B. Mr. Howe Filed His Notice of Claim Within the Period Mandated by the Utah Governmental Immunity Act
9833 In addition to meeting one of the UGIA's exceptions that nullifies immunity, a claimant must file the notice of claim "within one year after the claim arises." Utah Code Ann. $ 63-80-12 (1997). The district court held that Mr. Howe's notice of claim was statutorily untimely under the UGIA. However, the district court used the date Mr. Howe filed his complaint in Third District Court-April 7, 2005-rather than the date he filed his notice of claim-June 25, 2004-as the date of notice of his claims against city employees. The district court's use of the later date is understandable given its conclusion that Mr. Howe's June 25, 2004 notice of claim did not sufficiently allege fraud or malice. Having found Mr. Howe's notice of claim insufficient, the court used the next document that could satisfy the UGIA's notice-of-claim requirement. That document was Mr. Howe's complaint, which was filed outside of the UGIA's one-year mandate.
€34 Given our holding that Mr. Howe's notice of claim sufficiently alleged malice on the part of Ms. Werner and Sgt. Bryant, the proper date from which to apply the UGIA's one-year statute of limitations is the earlier date of June 25, 2004. Therefore, to be timely under the UGIA, Mr. Howe's claim must have arisen within the single year preceding the June 25, 2004 filing. All of the events giving rise to Mr. Howe's claims occurred within one year of that date.
*1237 T35 Mr. Howe's notice was timely under the UGIA. We therefore reverse the district court's grant of Salt Lake City's motion for summary judgment under the UGIA and remand Mr. Howe's state claims 8 to the district court.
III MR. HOWES UNLAWFUL SEIZURE CLAIM SURVIVES QUALIFIED IMMUNITY, BUT THE DISTRICT COURT PROPERLY DISMISSED HIS REMAINING $ 1983 CLAIMS
136 Congress enacted 42 U.S.C. § 1983 " 'to protect the people from unconstitutional action under color of state law'" Patsy v. Bd. of Regents,
137 The district court dismissed each of Mr. Howe's § 1988 claims. For clarity, we divide these claims into three categories. First, we analyze the claims dismissed under the doctrine of qualified immunity. Second, we address the claims dismissed for insufficient pleading. Finally, we conclude with a discussion of the claims against Sgt. Bryant's and Ms. Werner's supervisors and Salt Lake City. 10
A. Qualified Immunity
¶38 While the text of § 1988 is silent on the issue of immunity, courts recognize two distinct forms of governmental immunity arising under federal law. See Buckley v. Fitzsimmons,
¶89 Generally, public employees are entitled to the protection of qualified immunity because the doctrine "represents the norm" for government employees. Malley v. Briggs,
{$40 Whether a government official is entitled to qualified immunity turns on a two-part analysis. See Pearson,
% 41 In analyzing qualified immunity a court must apply "special rules" involy-ing the burden of proof on summary judgment. Reynolds v. Powell,
142 The district court in this case dismissed four of Mr. Howe's § 1983 claims under qualified immunity. Those claims are (1) unlawful seizure, (2) malicious prosecution, (8) violation of substantive due process, and (4) First Amendment retaliation. With the exclusion of Mr. Howe's retaliation claim, which he failed to raise on appeal, we discuss each of these claims separately.
1. Sgt. Bryant and Ms. Werner Are Not Entitled to Qualified Immunity on Mr. Howe's § 1988 Seizure Claim
148 The district court dismissed Mr. Howe's § 1983 unlawful seizure claim, hold *1239 ing the government employees were entitled to qualified immunity because Mr. Howe failed to show the actions of Sgt. Bryant and Ms. Werner amounted to a violation of his Fourth Amendment right against unreasonable seizure. First, the district court found that Mr. Howe was not seized within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment. Second, the district court found that, even if a seizure occurred, Mr. Howe failed to show Sgt. Bryant and Ms. Werner acted without probable cause.
144 We must first determine whether the actions by the police on June 27, 2003, constituted a seizure, and, if so, whethеr the seizure was unreasonable. See Fuerschbach v. Sw. Airlines Co.,
145 In determining that Mr. Howe was not subject to a seizure, the district court referenced Martines v. Corr. In that case, the Tenth Cireuit Court of Appeals considered whether the issuance of a misdemeanor citation alone amounts to a seizure under the Fourth Amendment. Martinez v. Carr,
1 46 In this case, Mr. Howe relies on the cireumstances surrounding the issuance of the citation as a basis for 'his seizure claim. While we agree with the district court that Sgt. Bryant did not seize Mr. Howe simply by issuing the citation, we believe that there are facts to support a conclusion that he did seize Mr. Howe briefly before issuing the citation. The defendants do not dispute that, upon summoning Mr. Howe to the Peak Alarm lobby, Sgt. Bryant told Mr. Howe that he intended to "arrest" him. There is some dispute in the record about what occurred next. Sgt. Bryant claims to have immediately told Mr. Howe that he would be released on a citation "if that was his preference." Mr. Howe claims Sgt. Bryant repeated the statement and the two began arguing about the merits of the citation before Sgt. Bryant told him that he could avoid going to jail by signing a citation. Since we must take the facts as alleged by Mr. Howe as true at this stage, we conclude that those facts support a claim that Sgt. Bryant seized Mr. Howe for a brief period before beginning the process of issuing Mr. Howe a citation. No reasonable *1240 person would believe he was free to leave after an officer states he intends to arrest him. Indeed, Sgt. Bryant stated Mr. Howe was not free to leave during the July 27 exchange and, had Mr. Howe attempted to leave, it is likely Sgt. Bryant would have arrested him.
{47 Accordingly, Mr. Howe has alleged facts that support a claim that Sgt. Bryant violated his constitutional right to be free from an unreasonable seizure. Thus, the district court incorrectly determined that no seizure occurred on June 27. This showing, however, is sufficient only to satisfy the first part of the qualified-immunity test as we do not decide Mr. Howe's seizure claim as a matter of law. Whether Mr. Howe was seized is a factual question that must be resolved in the district court.
148 This does not conclude our analysis of whether Mr. Howe successfully made out a violation of a constitutional right under qualified immunity. We must also consider whether the seizure was unreasonable or, in other words, whether Mr. Howe provided sufficient facts to demonstrate Sgt. Bryant lacked probable cause for the arrest. If probable cause existed, then the seizure was reasonable; if not, the seizure was unreasonable and exceeded constitutional bounds. See Herring v. United States,
149 "Probable cause is based on the totality of cireumstances" and employs an objective test questioning whether a reasonable officer would believe the arrested individual has committed a crime. Cortes,
1 50 Thus, the question here is whether a reasonable officer-operating under the facts facing Sgt. Bryant at the time-would have seized Mr. Howe. Sgt. Bryant found two statements by Mr. Howe critical in reaching his decision to charge Mr. Howe with making a false alarm. First, Mr. Howe falsely stated that a private security guard had verified a burglary at the school. Second, Mr. Howe stated, "[wJhatever it takes, I thought it was a panic alarm." These two statements, however, are only part of the totality of the cireumstances.
[ 51 Other cireumstances demonstrate that the statements about the security guard's purported presence at the school were the product of an incorrect assumption on Mr. Howe's part, not a knowing misrepresentation. - Tellingly, within minutes of Mr. Howe's initial call to police, he expressly informed a police dispatcher that the information about the security guard had been incorrect.
152 Moreover, to determine whether probable ecause existed under the totality of these cireumstances, the statute Sgt. Bryant used to cite Mr. Howe must be considered. 12 The false alarm statute imposes criminаl liability when (1) an individual reports a crime, (2) the individual knows the *1241 report is false or baseless, and (8) the individual knows the report will prompt action by police. Utah Code Ann. § 76-9-105(1) (2008). There can be no doubt-and therefore it was reasonable for Sgt. Bryant to conclude-Mr. Howe meets the first and third elements of this statute. After all, Mr. Howe reported a burglary in progress and the point of Mr. Howe's call was to prompt police to respond.
53 Whether Mr. Howe knew his report to police dispatch on June 27, 2008, was false or baseless is a much closer question. The plain language of Utah's false alarm statute criminalizes the acts of those who report a crime with knowledge that the report (of the crime) is false or baseless. Id. This statute does not criminalize mere false statements. As an illustration, the statute criminalizes the actions of a homeowner who reports a fire while knowing no fire exists. In contrast, we cannot read the statute to reach a homeowner who calls in a fire but reports that the fire's origin was in the kitchen when it in fact started in a different room. Although the homeowner makes a false statement in the latter example, police would lack probable cause to arrest for making a false alarm because the homeowner did not make the call knowing the report of a fire was false or baseless. The linchpin to criminal culpability under Utah Code section 76-9-105 is the caller's subjective knowledge that the report is false or baseless as to the existence of a crime. Taking the facts presented by Mr. Howe аs true, as we must, we conclude that they tend to show he believed a burglary was occurring at West High School.
1 54 Our decision here, as it was in Part I, is largely conditioned on the burden imposed under the analysis. - Unlike Part I, we must accept the facts as presented by Mr. Howe as true in this part of our analysis. See Fuerschbach,
{55 We now consider the second prong of the qualified immunity test: whether Mr. Howe's right to be free from unreasonable seizure was clearly established at the time of the alleged unlawful conduct. "The relevant, dispositive inquiry in determining whether a right is clearly established is whether it would be clear to a reasonable officer that his conduct was unlawful under the circumstances presented." Buck,
1 56 In sum, Mr. Howe has presented facts that tend to show Sgt. Bryant violated his Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable seizure, a right clearly established at the time of Sgt. Bryant's alleged misconduct. Thus, the district court erred *1242 when it dismissed Mr. Howe's unreasonable seizure claim under qualified immunity.
2. Sgt. Bryant and Ms. Werner Are Entitled to Qualified Immunity on Mr. Howe's Malicious Prosecution Claim
157 Under federal jurisprudence, a § 1983 malicious prosecution claim lies within the protections provided in either the Fourth or Fourteenth Amendments. "The initial seizure is governed by the Fourth Amendment, but at some point after arrest, and certainly by the time of trial, constitutional analysis shifts to the Due Process Clause." Pierce v. Gilchrist,
158 A malicious prosecution action based in the Fourth Amendment requires a seizure pursuant to legal process or some interference with individual liberties. "A groundless charging decision may abuse the criminal process, but it does not, in and of itsеlf, violate the Fourth Amendment absent a significant restriction on liberty." Becker v. Kroll,
159 What complicates this analysis is that a detention giving rise to a claim of unlawful seizure does not necessarily create a seizure for malicious prosecution purposes. See Wilkins v. DeReyes,
160 Hence, a malicious prosecution claim based on the Fourth Amendment is viewed as a seizure, as a consequence of the improрer use of legal process. Therefore, as a threshold matter, Mr. Howe's malicious prosecution claim will not survive the first prong of the qualified immunity test if Mr. Howe failed to show he was detained after the institution of legal process in his false alarm prosecution. The brief detention Mr. Howe was subjected to before the issuance of the citation occurred before the initiation of any legal process. The only other fact giving rise to an inference of a seizure is the fact that Sgt. Bryant retained Mr. Howe's driver's license after issuing the citation. Mr. Howe has failed to present any facts contradicting the district court's holding that the retention of Mr. Howe's driver's license was inadvertent and caused no restriction on any of Mr. Howe's liberties.
T 61 Some federal courts have recognized a theory of continuing seizure as a constitutional violation in the absence of physical restraint. See Penberth v. Krajnak,
162 Even if we were to recognize the doctrine of continuing seizure, the facts in this case are inadequate to show such a seizure occurred. See Penberth,
3. Sgt. Bryant and Ms. Werner Are Entitled to Qualified Immunity on Mr. Howe's Substantive Due Process Claim
- 63 The district court also dismissed Mr. Howe's substantive due process claim, holding that Mr. Howe had "failed to show any extreme conduct" by the defendants. Mr. Howe urges us to revive this claim under a theory that the defendants did not bring the false alarm charge against him because they believed he was guilty. Rather, Mr. Howe contends the charge was "intended to punish" him for his public opposition to Salt Lake City's verified response program аnd to silence other opposition from the private alarm sector. The district court dismissed Mr. Howe's substantive due process claim, holding that he had not alleged facts showing any conduct by Sgt. Bryant or Ms. Werner sufficient to make out a substantive due process violation as required by the first prong of the qualified immunity doctrine.
$64 It is well settled that the Fourteenth Amendment's protection of life, liberty, and property gives rise to substantive due process claims. See Graves v. Thomas,
"a plaintiff must do more than show that the government actor intentionally or recklessly caused injury to the plaintiff by abusing or misusing government power. The plaintiff must demonstrate a degree of outrageousness and a magnitude of potential or actual harm that is truly conscience *1244 shocking. This is a high level of outra geousness."
Ward v. Anderson,
T65 Intentionally using criminal charges as an instrument to oppress opposition to government is well within the prohibitions considered part of substantive due process. See Bell v. Johnson,
In this case, Plaintiffs have developed substantial evidence that would enable the jury to conclude that Defendants intended to punish Jeff Howe for his political speech, as [Ms.] Werner put it, to send 'a signal to other alarm companies' Such motives are unjustifiable by any legitimate government interest and, therefore, shock the conscience.
This argument is merely a restatement of Mr. Howe's legal theory for his substantive due process claim and fails to identify any fact supporting his theory beyond Ms. Wer-ner's statement, which contains no indication that the "message" in question had anything to do with prosecuting innocent people.
T66 Moreover, Mr. Howe has taken Ms. Werner's statement out of context. Mr. Howe's abbreviated version of Ms. Werner's statement suggests Ms. Werner wanted to put the alarm industry on notice that opposition to the verified response program would be met by criminal penalties in Salt Lake City. Ms. Werner's complete statement provides an alternative interpretation. She stated, "I'm hoping for the enforcement of our ordinance that it goes well. If the jury lets Peak Alarm off the hook, to me that's a signal to other alarm companies to call Salt Lake City police and tell them whatever they want." Ms. Werner's statement evidently goes to a concern about the message sent by the legal process as opposed to a message from the city to the alarm industry.
167 Mr. Howe has never provided any additional analysis drawing on other facts in the record that suggest the defendants targeted him as a means of oppressing opposition to the verified response program. This court has interpreted Utah Rule of Appellate Procedure 24(a)(9) to require appellants to present meaningful analysis because the appellate courts of this state are not depositories in which "the appealing party may dump the burden of argument and research." State v. Jaeger,
B. Insufficient Pleading
T68 The district court dismissed Mr. Howe's Fourteenth Amendment stigma plus claim and his First Amendment nonretaliation action on the basis that neither claim was sufficiently pled under Utah's notice pleading standard. Specifically, the district court found that Mr. Howe raised both of these claims for the first time in his pleading in opposition to Salt Lake City's motion for summary judgment.
169 "A plaintiff is required, under our liberal standard of notiсe pleading, to submit a 'short and plain statement showing that the pleader is entitled to relief and 'a demand for judgment for the relief?" Canfield v. Layton City,
170 We have not previously had an opportunity to review how Utah's liberal pleading standard interacts with claims pled under § 1983. Claims sounding in § 1983 "pose a greater likelihood of failures in notice and plausibility because they typically include complex claims against multiple defendants." Robbins v. Okla. ex rel. Dep't of Human Servs.,
T71 Having settled the pleading requirement for a § 1988 claim under the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure, we turn to the merits of the district court's dismissal, first addressing Mr. Howe's nonretaliation claim and then his stigma plus action.
1. Mr. Howe's Cоmplaint Failed to Give Salt Lake City Notice of a Nonretaliation Claim Based on the First Amendment
172 Mr. Howe asserts his First Amendment nonretaliation claim is based on a theory that Ms. Werner's statements about Peak Alarm and Mr. Howe were designed to suppress opposition to the verified response program. This claim is based on Ms. Wer-ner's statements alone and is entirely independent of Mr. Howe's detention and prosecution.
173 Mr. Howe's Amended Complaint referenced the First Amendment. This reference and the adjoining allegations of this complaint put Salt Lake City on notice that Mr. Howe intended to bring a First Amendment retaliation claim under a theory that Sgt. Bryant detained and subjected Mr. Howe to prosecution as punishment for speaking publicly against the verified response program. At summary judgment, and on appeal, Mr. Howe attempted to create an entirely separate First Amendment claim based on Ms. Werner's alleged defamatory statements. We have serious doubts that the alleged defamation in this case can create a constitutional violation giving rise to a § 1983 action. See Paul v. Davis,
2. While Mr. Howe Adequately Pled His Stigma Plus Claim, the District Court Did Not Err by Dismissing the Claim Because Mr. Howe Plеd the Action as a Substantive Due Process Violation
174 A stigma plus claim is based on the liberty protections found in the Fourteenth Amendment and is at issue when "a person's good name, reputation, honor, or integrity is at stake because of what the government is doing to him." Gwinn v. Awmiller,
T75 Mr. Howe's Amended Complaint alleges (1) Ms. Werner, with the authorization of the police department, engaged in a "campaign" of false statements aimed at maligning Peak Alarm and the entire alarm industry, and (2) these statements amounted to a government-imposed burden. Additionally, Mr. Howe stated this claim was based, in part, on a Fourteenth Amendment violation including a "deprivation of his liberty without due process of law." These allegations were sufficient to give Salt Lake City fair notice that Mr. Howe intended to bring a stigma plus claim under the Fourteenth Amendment.
176 Despite the adequate pleading by Mr. Howe, we affirm the district court's decision on an alternative ground. "It is well settled that an appellate court may affirm the judgment аppealed from "if it is sustainable on any legal ground or theory apparent on the record."" Bailey v. Bayles,
C. - Supervisor Liability and Claims Against Salt Lake City
T 77 Up until this point, our analysis of Mr. Howe's $ 1983 claims were those brought against Sgt. Bryant and Ms. Werner individually. Additionally, Mr. Howe attempted to render Salt Lake City liable for a pattern of tortious behavior by the two employees. Mr. Howe also brought a separate cause of action against the former Police Chief and the Assistant Police Chief on the basis of supervisor liability. The district court dismissed these claims. We address both of these actions individually, turning first to Salt Lake City's liability as a municipality.
1. The District Court Correctly Dismissed Mr. Howe's Claim Against Salt Lake City Because the City Lacked Constructive Notice Through a Pattern of Tortious Conduct
178 Municipalities may be held liable under § 1988 for civil rights violations.
*1247
See Bd. of the Cnty. Comm'rs v. Brown,
T 79 Local governments may only be held liable under § 1983 for their "own unconstitutional or illegal policies" leading to an employee's tortious conduct. Barney v. Pulsipher,
180 Mr. Howe did not bring a facial attack on any Salt Lake City policy as a violation of federal law. Thus, the only avenue left open to Mr. Howe is a theory that "lawful municipal action has led an employee to violate a plaintiffs rights [by] de-monstrat[ing] that the municipal action was taken with 'deliberate indifference' as to its known or obvious consequences." - Brown,
{81 The phrase "pattern of tortious conduct" has not been clearly defined. The case law suggests, however, that the local government is on notice of such a pattern only after repeated violations have harmed others in addition to the plaintiff. See Daskalea v. Dist. of Columbia,
11 82 In this case, Mr. Howe alleges the city acted with deliberate indifference to Ms. Werner's "undisputed pattern of defamation" and that the Salt Lake City officials "failed to discipline Ms. Werner." First, we do not see how Ms. Werner's generalized criticism of the alarm industry defamed Mr. Howe or Peak Alarm. Moreover, Mr. Howe has failed to show any pattern of alleged tortious behavior that would put Salt Lake City on notice of repeated constitutional violations. Therefore, the district court did not err in dismissing Mr. Howe's claim against Salt Lake City because city officials did not have actual or constructive notice of unlawful acts by Ms. Werner giving rise to deliberate indifference.
2. The District Court Did Not Err in Dismissing Mr. Howe's Claim Against the Defendant Suрervisors Because Neither the Police Chief Nor the Assistant Police Chief Is Linked to Constitutional Violations by Subordinates
183 In limited cireumstances, a supervisor may be held liable under § 1983 for the acts of a subordinate. See Fogarty,
184 The affirmative-link standard is measured by a two-part showing. First, the analysis focuses on the supervisor's conduct in an attempt to discover whether the supervisor "actively participated or acquiesced in the constitutional violation." Serna,
185 In the district court, Mr. Howe attempted to impose liability on the former Police Chief and the Assistant Police Chief *1249 for the alleged constitutional violations by Sgt. Bryant and Ms. Werner. Sgt. Bryant and Ms. Werner were their subordinates during the time period relevant to this litigation. Pursuant to Parts III. A and B, Mr. Howe's only surviving constitutional claim against either of the employees is an action for an unlawful seizure arising under the Fourth Amendment. Therefore, Mr. Howe is required to establish an affirmative link between the unconstitutional seizure and some personal involvement by the supervisors.
86 To accomplish this, Mr. Howe directs us to one statement each by the Chief and Assistant Chief, As to the Police Chief, Mr. Howe points to an e-mail the Chief authored, in which he described the alarm industry as "unserupulous." We find it difficult to see how this e-mail demonstrates active participation or acquiescence in the disputed seizure of Mr. Howe. The e-mail is not directed at Sgt. Bryаnt or Ms. Werner. 14 Nor does Mr. Howe allege the e-mail ever reached either employee. Further, the email was sent on November 17, 2008, some three months after Mr. Howe's disputed seizure. This e-mail cannot be construed as direct participation in Mr. Howe's seizure or as a failure to supervise an employee. Thus, the district court correctly dismissed Mr. Howe's claim against the Police Chief on the basis of supervisor liability.
187 Next, Mr. Howe points to an e-mail between the Assistant Chief and Ms. Werner in an effort to suggest that the Assistant Chief encouraged unlawful behavior. That email came in response to a message sent from Ms. Werner to the Assistant Chief and the current Police Chief Ms. Werner's email is titled "My new motto in regards to the alarm industry" and the text is a quote that states "I never did give anybody hell, I just told the truth and they thought it was hell." The Assistant Chief responded, "I like it." This e-mail was authored on September 21, 2004, nearly fifteen months after the disputed seizure. Mr. Howe directs us to no other facts that demonstrate the Assistant Chief directly participated or acquiesced to an unlawful seizure of Mr. Howe through either his direct participation or failure to supervise Sgt. Bryant and Ms. Werner. Thus, the district court did not err in dismissing Mr. Howe's claim of supervisor liability.
CONCLUSION
1 88 We hold that the trial court correctly rejected Mr. Howe's motion for partial summary judgment on the basis of collateral estoppel and the totality of the cireum-stances. Mr. Howe was unable to prove as a matter of law that he was arrested and prosecuted without probable cause. But we hold that the district court erred when it dismissеd Mr. Howe's state claims because he in fact provided sufficient notice in a timely manner as required by the UGIA.
1 89 Finally, we affirm in part and reverse in part the district court's ruling on Salt Lake City's motion for summary judgment on Mr. Howe's federal claims sounding in § 1983. We hold that the district court erred in dismissing Mr. Howe's Fourth Amendment seizure claim because Mr. Howe presented facts sufficient to allege that an unlawful seizure occurred. Nonetheless, we affirm the district court's decision to dismiss the remaining claims against Ms. Werner, Sgt. Bryant, their supervisors, and Salt Lake City.
1 90 We therefore remand this case to the district court for disposition of Mr. Howe's state claims as discussed in Part II, note 7, and Mr. Howe's unlawful seizure claim under § 1988.
Notes
. In the district court, Mr. Howe stipulated to the dismissal of this cause of action and it is not part of this appeal.
. By the time the district court considered the motions for summary judgment at issue in this appeal, Mr. Howe's § 1983 claims had evolved into eight independent claims arising under the First, Fourth, and Fourteenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution.
. Mr. Howe also moved for summary judgment on the claims under § 1983. The district court tacitly rejected that motion by granting Salt Lake City's motion for summary judgment and holding the defendants were entitled to qualified immunity under § 1983.
. In its order, the district court dismissed Mr. Howe's action arising under the Utah Constitution as part of a UGIA analysis The court's order, however, addressed the merits of this constitutional claim and does not merely dismiss on immunity grounds. Mr. Howe failed to address the merits of this claim in his appeal. Under rule 24(a)(9) of the Utah Rules of Appellate Procеdure, Mr. Howe therefore waived this claim and we do not consider it as part of this appeal. See Allen v. Friel,
. A motion for summary judgment on qualified immunity requires application of "special rules" regarding which party has the burden of persuasion and how the reviewing court views the evidence. Reynolds v. Powell,
. While we note that the justice court's ruling may be "some evidence" of a lack of probable cause, we express no opinion on whether this evidence is admissible in any particular proceeding.
. In 2004, the Utah Legislature repealed the Utah Governmental Immunity Act, Utah Code Ann. §§ 63-30-1 to -38 (1997) and re-enacted the statutory scheme as the Governmental Immunity Act of Utah. Id. §§ 63-30d-101 to -904 (2004). Our citations here will be to the former statuie because the former enactment was in effect at the time of Mr. Howe's alleged injuries.
*1236
See Peck v. State,
. Those causes of action are (1) false arrest/imprisonment, (2) malicious prosecution, (3) violation of the Citizens Participation in Government Act, (4) defamation, (5) intentional infliction of emotional distress, (6) conspiracy, and (7) negligence.
. A stigma plus cause of action is based in part on alleged defamatory statements that cause damage to one's reputation. To arise to a claim covered by § 1983, a plaintiff must show "stigma to his reputation plus deprivation of some additional right оr interest." Dee v. Borough of Dunmore,
. We do not consider Mr. Howe's First Amendment retaliation claim because he failed to address that claim on appeal. An appellant waives a claim by failing to provide the appellate panel with "contentions and reasons" supporting a reversal of the lower court. Utah R.App. P. 24(a)(9); Allen v. Friel,
. Until early 2009, the Supreme Court mandated the two-part test be conducted sequentially. Pearson,
. - In evaluating an unlawful seizure claim under § 1983, courts must consider which crimes the police "could objectively and reasonably have believed [the plaintiff] committed." - Fogarty,
. In 2007, the U.S. Supreme Court adopted a new pleading standard for cases arising under the Sherman Act, ie., antitrust cases. Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly,
Our holding here is not an indication that we adopt the Supreme Court's plausibility standard. Our reference to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure is only for the purpose of agreeing that § 1983 claims require no heightened pleading standard.
. The e-mail appears to be a discussion between a number of police chiefs from around the county about whether a national committee should accept funding from the Alarm Industry Association.
