Defendant-Appellant John Leonard appeals from an order of the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut (Alan H. Nevas, Judge) denying his motion for summary judgment, which asserted a defense of qualified immunity, and denying his motion in limine to exclude Plaintiff Appellee Peggy Poe’s expert witness.
This appeal arises out of alleged misconduct by Douglas Pearl, then a trooper with the Connecticut State Police (“CSP”), who surreptitiously videotaped Poe undressing at the CSP Training Center after asking Poe to appear in a training video. Poe sued Pearl and Captain John Leonard, Pearl’s former supervisor, in their individual capacities under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging that, while acting under color of state law, Pearl violated her constitutional right to privacy and Leonard violated her rights by his gross negligence or deliberate indifference in failing to adequately train, supervise, and discipline Pearl.
Both defendants moved for judgment on the pleadings, and the District Court granted the motion on the state law claims of negligence but denied the motion in all other respects. The District Court ruled that Poe had stated a claim for the violation of her constitutional right to privacy under the Fourteenth Amendment in her unclothed body and that this right was clearly established before the incident occurred.
See Poe v. Pearl,
No. 94 Civ. 2058(AHN),
Approximately two and one-half years later, Leonard moved for summary judgment on the basis of qualified immunity. Leonard also moved in limine to preclude the testimony of Poe’s expert witness, Dr. Louis A. Mayo. The District Court denied both motions. In its ruling, the District Court clarified that the scope of Poe’s claim against Leonard was Leonard’s alleged gross negligence in his managing, supervising, training, and disciplining of Pearl. The District Court concluded that genuine disputes of material fact existed as *126 to whether Leonard was grossly negligent and that these disputes precluded finding that, as a matter of law, Leonard’s conduct was objectively reasonable.
This appeal again forces this Court to address the often complex subject of qualified immunity, particularly as it relates to the existence of appellate jurisdiction, to a supervisor’s responsibility over a subordinate who commits an intentional constitutional tort, and to a plaintiffs constitutional right of privacy in a non-seizure, non-prisoner context. We hold that in order for a supervisor to be held liable under section 1983, both the law allegedly violated by the subordinate and the supervisory liability doctrine under which the plaintiff seeks to hold the supervisor liable must be clearly established. By 1993, it was clearly established that a police officer violates a person’s Fourteenth Amendment right to bodily privacy when that officer views, photographs or otherwise records another’s unclothed or partially unclothed body, without that person’s consent. By 1993, it was also clearly established that a supervisor could be liable if he had actual or constructive notice that it was highly likely that his subordinate, while on duty, might violate another’s right to privacy in his or her unclothed body, but the supervisor deliberately or recklessly disregarded that risk by failing to take reasonable action to prevent such a violation, and that failure caused the constitutional injury to the plaintiff.
Construing all the facts and drawing all reasonable inferences in Poe’s favor, we conclude that Leonard is entitled to qualified immunity because the evidence that Poe asserts should have put Leonard on notice that he needed to supervise Pearl more closely is insufficient as a matter of law to demonstrate that Leonard is liable as Pearl’s supervisor under clearly established law. Put another way, Poe fails to adduce enough evidence to establish that Leonard’s inaction was reckless or deliberately indifferent to a high risk that Pearl would violate Poe’s constitutional rights. Moreover, we conclude that reasonable supervisors in Leonard’s position, knowing what he knew, could disagree as to whether his inaction was unlawful. Therefore, we reverse the order of the District Court denying Leonard’s motion for summary judgment and remand to the District Court with instructions to dismiss with prejudice the complaint against Leonard.
BACKGROUND
Because this is an appeal from the denial of a motion for summary judgment, we construe the evidence in the light most favorable to Poe, the non-moving party.
See, e.g., Goldberg v. Cablevision Sys. Corp.,
I. Factual Background
A. The Filming of the Trooper Candidate Testing Videos
At some time during the fall of 1992, several administrative officials of the Connecticut State Police (“CSP”) and the Connecticut Department of Administrative Services began to revise the testing procedures for trooper candidates at the CSP Training Academy (“police academy”). Captain Leonard, who had just assumed command of the CSP Bureau of Selections and Training, 1 supervised this ongoing project along with Dr. Martin Anderson (“Dr. Anderson”), the Chief Personnel Psychologist for the State of Connecticut. A particular focus of this project was the devel *127 opment of several testing videos, designed to screen out those trooper candidates with poor observational and communicative skills. In essence, trooper candidates would be required to view a videotaped scene of a crime or other representative “real life” scenario that CSP officers typically confront and then, to explain what they had observed. As originally planned, the video scenes would include a variety of circumstances: a depiction of a person driving while intoxicated, a man with a weapon who stops and robs a victim, a simple trespass, a “static” crime scene, and a scene with a distraught victim.
During this project, Leonard met with Dr. Anderson and with Pearl, who was the trooper responsible for the production of training and public service videos. Although Pearl had several supervisors at the police academy, Leonard directly supervised Pearl in connection with the testing videotape production.
Pearl, unfortunately, had a history of inappropriate or otherwise problematic behavior with female civilians while on duty. Pearl’s personnel file contains four separate improper incidents in a seven-year period, two of which bear mentioning for our purposes. In 1989, Pearl was given an unsatisfactory performance evaluation report for photographing several young women in swimsuits in a private bedroom while filming a public safety announcement. In 1983, a woman filed a formal complaint against Pearl, alleging that he made “numerous unwanted and improper advances” toward her and improperly touched her when he escorted her to and from the hospital following her epileptic seizure. These incidents, however, all occurred well before Leonard assumed command.
Although the incidents were described in Pearl’s personnel file, at no time prior to the incident involving Poe did Leonard review Pearl’s personnel file. 2 Leonard was unaware of, and was not informed by his predecessor 3 of, any performance or disciplinary issues involving Pearl at any time prior to the incident involving Poe. 4 In his affidavit, Leonard indicated that it “is not the policy or practice of the CSP for supervisors newly assigned to supervi *128 sory positions to review the personnel, disciplinary or internal affairs files of subordinate employees without some justifiable reason to do so.” Leonard Aff. ¶ 11. Leonard also testified during his deposition that while outgoing supervisors and their replacements may discuss informally any pending personnel problems, the CSP had no formal policy of outgoing supervisors providing such information to their replacements.
Unaware of Pearl’s history, Leonard gave him “blanket permission” to make any arrangement that Pearl saw fit for filming the scenes. Although Leonard did not supervise any of the actual filming by Pearl, he viewed the draft videos Pearl produced. Of particular relevance to this appeal and as pressed by Poe is the static crime scene video, produced before the incident involving Poe. This crime scene features a motel room in disarray, with beer bottles and articles of clothing strewn about, and a gun on the bed. As Pearl, the eameraperson, films the inside of the bathroom, he eventually focuses on bloodstains on the wall and the body of a gagged, female victim in the bathtub with her clothes in disarray.
Poe emphasizes two portions of the video: a focus on a bra on the bed and a lingering shot on the victim’s upper thigh region. The entire crime scene lasts for approximately one minute and forty-five seconds on the testing video. During that time, Pearl pans the camera to the bra on the bed for approximately one-half of one second, and later returns to focus on the bra for approximately two seconds. Pearl also focuses on other articles of clothing in the room. For example, he focuses on a pair of men’s black socks on the floor for one second. In between the shots of the bra, Pearl films the disorder by the dresser for approximately fifteen seconds. Pearl then moves into the bathroom, where he focuses on the bathroom sink, located opposite from the tub, for approximately eight seconds. Pearl then spends a total of thirty-four seconds filming the female “victim” who is lying in the tub, with one leg extending outside of the tub. The victim is wearing a cropped, short-sleeve T-shirt and what appears to be a white pair of shorts that is hiked to her upper thighs. Pearl lingers for approximately seventeen seconds on the victim’s lower body, with a close-up on her upper thighs. He then pans out to include her legs and pans up to show her clothed upper body with a final focus on her head for another six seconds.
After viewing the static crime scene video, Leonard did not express any concern nor question Pearl about the scene. Although he knew that the woman playing the victim was a motel employee, and not a CSP officer, Leonard did not discuss any specific procedure that Pearl should follow when filming a video with civilian participants. 5
Upon his completion of the static crime scene video, Pearl’s next task was to film a scenario involving an armed robber robbing a convenience store. Although the scene originally contemplated a male robber, Pearl suggested to Leonard during their meeting that the role be recast as a woman in order to make the scene “atypical.” Pearl told Leonard that a friend (Poe) of Pearl’s fiancée would play the *129 robber. Pearl testified in his deposition that, during this meeting, he remembered “discussing the fact that we wanted the female robber to display ‘a lot of cleavage,’ ” in order to distract the testing candidates from the threat at hand. Leonard did not object to or question Pearl about this last suggestion.
Pearl invited Poe to the police academy, suggesting that she dress “provocatively” so that her appearance would be distracting to the testing candidates and that she bring several changes of clothing in case the clothing she wore was not appropriate for the look he wanted to achieve. After Poe arrived at the police academy wearing a skimpy low-cut blouse, Pearl directed her to change her clothing, specifically requesting that she “lose the bra.” Pearl suggested that she change clothes in his office, told her where to stand, and left the room. Once Poe removed her shirt and bra, she noticed that a video camera sitting on a shelf was videotaping her. Poe brought the tape to the CSP, which investigated the incident and terminated Pearl.
B. Relevant Policies and Procedures of the CSP
Poe argues that Leonard’s failure to supervise Pearl more closely, after viewing the static crime scene video, violated Leonard’s duties as defined by CSP regulations. Two of the guidelines of the Connecticut Department of Public Safety Administration & Operations Manual applicable to Captain Leonard as a commanding officer read as follows:
2.4.3b.(4) Command personnel shall delegate authority and shall supervise the work of subordinates closely, holding frequent conferences to guide and direct activities.
2.4.3b.(10) Command personnel shall monitor the proper-use of discretion by subordinates, ensuring that department personnel adhere to and abide by the appropriate rules, regulations and department policies and procedures.
Poe asserts that there is also a “policy” of the CSP prohibiting male officers from being alone with female civilians. Such a policy, if one existed, would suggest that Leonard failed to follow his duty under subsection 10 of the guidelines because he did not take any action after viewing the static crime scene video, which, Poe argues, should have indicated to Leonard that Pearl was alone with a female civilian. Even if Poe could point to evidence that Leonard “should have known” that Pearl was alone with the motel employee from the videotape, a contention we have already rejected, see supra note 5, her assertion regarding the existence of such a policy does not withstand scrutiny.
At oral argument, Poe conceded that there was no policy against male officers being alone with female civilians. Tr. of Oral Argument at 25. Despite this concession, Poe contends that this “policy” is a CSP “norm” and cites a CSP sergeant’s confidential investigative report of a misconduct complaint filed against Pearl in 1983 alleging that he made improper advances toward a woman he escorted to and from a hospital. The sergeant failed to conclusively establish the complainant’s allegations but concluded that “[wjhat can be demonstrated is that the Trooper did not utilize the best of [judgment] nor follow standard procedure in placing himself alone in the room with a female victim ....” 6 There is no evidence that Leon *130 ard knew or should have known of this “standard procedure” or “norm,” nor that he read this confidential report. Certainly, there is no evidence of such a procedure’s official recognition.
C. Expert Testimony
During its review of Leonard’s motion for summary judgment, the District Court also had before it the report and testimony of Poe’s expert witness, Dr. Mayo, president of a police management consulting firm. 7 Dr. Mayo opined that Leonard was negligent in his failure to perform a proper review of the performance history of his subordinates, and in his failure to supervise Pearl properly, including Leonard’s delegation of “essentially carte blanche” authority to Pearl to film the videos as Pearl saw fit. Dr. Mayo highlighted the fact that Leonard did not restrict Pearl’s authority even after Leonard viewed the improper situation in the static crime scene video as a continuing example of Leonard’s negligence in supervision. Leonard’s failure to supervise Pearl more closely, Dr. Mayo reasoned, sent a message to Pearl that his illegal actions would not be discovered. Dr. Mayo concluded that the “gross negligence in supervision of (then) Trooper Pearl by Captain Leonard constitutes a pattern of deliberate indifference .... ”
To support his contentions that Leonard was negligent, Dr. Mayo invoked various national policing principles. For example, Dr. Mayo testified during the Daubert hearing 8 that, contrary to “recommended national standards” cited by Mayo, Leonard failed to review the history of the personnel under his command when he first assumed his position. Dr. Mayo also testified that “basic police procedures” require “very strong management controls over any interaction” between a male officer and a female civilian. Dr. Mayo also cited national recommendations suggesting that supervisors should be constantly aware of the location and activities of those under their supervision. Despite his repeated invocations of national standards of proper police conduct, Dr. Mayo was unable to cite any example of a police department that practiced the standards he advocated.
II. Procedural History
In 1997, the District Court denied Pearl’s and Leonard’s motion for judgment on the pleadings, concluding that Poe had stated a claim for the violation of her constitutional right to privacy under the Fourteenth Amendment in her unclothed body and that this right was clearly established before the incident occurred.
Poe v. Pearl,
No. 94 Civ.2058(AHN),
After conducting a
Daubert
hearing, the District Court denied Leonard’s motion
in
*131
limine,
finding that Dr. Mayo’s testimony, which was based on his personal knowledge and experience, satisfied the requirements set forth in
Kumho Tire Co. v. Carmichael,
With Dr. Mayo’s testimony before it, the District Court found that genuine disputes of material fact existed that precluded a finding that Leonard’s supervision of Pearl was not grossly negligent or deliberately indifferent. Poe v. Pearl, No. 94 Civ. 2058(AHN), slip op. at 11, 16 (D.Conn. July 20, 2000). The District Court also ruled on Leonard’s defense of qualified immunity, concluding that “the issue of whether Leonard acted objectively reasonably] is inextricably intertwined with the merits of [Poe’s] claim” because both “issues require determination of whether a reasonable officer would believe that Leonard’s supervision of Pearl was reasonable and whether Leonard’s supervision violated fundamental standards of police supervision reflecting gross negligence or deliberate indifference.” Id. at 15. Leonard timely appealed.
DISCUSSION
We review
de novo
the District Court’s decision to deny a government official’s motion for summary judgment on the basis of qualified immunity.
Cerrone v. Brown,
I. Appellate Jurisdiction
Before we address the merits of this interlocutory appeal, we must determine whether we have appellate jurisdiction to do so.
The qualified immunity doctrine shields governmental officials performing discretionary functions from liability for civil damages “insofar as their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.”
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
“Because qualified immunity is a shield not only from liability, but also from the burdens of discovery and trial, a denial of immunity” may be reviewable on interlocutory appeal if it otherwise satisfies the test of the collateral, order doctrine as restated by
Coopers & Lybrand v. Livesay,
A more difficult question is presented when the district court’s legal rul
*132
ing depends upon an assessment of facts and a finding that disputed material facts exist. However, “a district court’s mere assertion that disputed factual issues exist[ed] [is not independently sufficient] to preclude an immediate appeal.”
Salim v. Proulx,
In this case, Leonard both in his brief and at oral argument has conceded Poe’s version of the facts for purposes of this appeal. Despite the District Court’s assertion that a genuine dispute exists as to whether a reasonable supervisor would have supervised Pearl differently, this dispute is essentially a legal one.
See, e.g., Tierney,
II. Qualified Immunity
A. Overview
Qualified immunity shields public officials from liability for civil damages if their actions were objectively reasonable, as evaluated in the context of legal rules that were “clearly established” at the time.
See Vega v. Miller,
Although
Saucier
did not change the analysis a court applies in examining a qualified immunity defense, it changed the procedure a court should follow. The Supreme Court emphasized that the qualified immunity inquiry “must be considered in proper sequence.”
Saucier,
B. Has Poe Alleged a Violation of a Clearly Established Right?
First, we must determine whether Poe alleges sufficient facts to show a violation of her constitutional rights. Poe must show a violation of a right secured by either the Constitution or a federal statute.
Rodriguez v. Phillips,
We conclude that Poe must show that both laws were clearly established to lay the predicate for demonstrating that Leonard lacked qualified immunity: the law violated by Pearl and the supervisory liability doctrine under which she wishes to hold Leonard liable. We thus join with the Circuits that have addressed this question and have held that a supervisor may not be held liable unless both legal theories were clearly established,
see Camilo-Robles v. Hoyos,
The qualified immunity analysis depends upon an individualized determination of the misconduct alleged. Because the establishment of both the violation and the defense depend upon evaluating the harm inflicted and the individual responsibility of the accused public official, both the subordinate’s and the supervisor’s actions (or lack thereof) are relevant. For example, to establish liability, Poe must prove proximate causation.
Blyden v. Mancusi,
To find Leonard ineligible for immunity solely because Pearl acted unlawfully seems patently unfair as well as illogical.
See Blyden,
If we find that Poe has sufficiently alleged a violation of her constitutional rights by both Pearl and Leonard, we must determine whether Leonard may be held liable for his actions. To do so, we must examine whether these actions were objectively reasonable “in light of the legal rules that were ‘clearly established’ ” at the time he acted.
Anderson,
in a more particularized, and hence more relevant, sense: The contours of the right must be sufficiently clear that a reasonable official would understand that what he is doing violates that right. This is not to say that an official action is protected by qualified immunity unless the very action in question has previously been held unlawful, but it is to say that in the light of pre-existing law the unlawfulness must be apparent.
Id.
at 640,
recurring difficulty with this general directive, however, lies in reasonably articulating the right in relation to the factual situation at hand. Characterizing the right too narrowly to the facts of the case might permit government actors to escape personal liability, while doing so too broadly risks permitting unwarranted imposition of monetary liability.
1. Violation of Poe’s Right to Privacy by Leonard’s Subordinate
At oral argument, Leonard conceded for purposes of this appeal that Poe *136 has sufficiently alleged a violation of her constitutional right to privacy, Tr. of Oral Argument at 9, although he had fully briefed the issue. 11 Even with this concession, we discuss this aspect of Poe’s claim in order to clarify that there is a right to privacy in one’s unclothed body. Although our prior cases have held that there is such a right in the context of prison confinement and search or seizure by the government, those cases did not limit the right to a Fourth Amendment setting. Accordingly, we conclude that the right to privacy in one’s unclothed body extends beyond a Fourth Amendment context to the case at hand.
The Fourth Amendment is not the proper source of Poe’s constitutional right because Pearl’s objectionable conduct occurred outside of a criminal investigation or other form of governmental investigation or activity.
Cf., e.g., Soldal v. Cook County,
Instead, Poe’s claim is appropriately analyzed pursuant to the Fourteenth Amendment’s guarantee of substantive due process.
See, e.g., Johnson,
We discuss cases analyzing such a privacy interest under the Fourth Amendment in addition to those cases applying the Fourteenth Amendment’s substantive due process standard to demonstrate that the type of privacy claim Poe asserts has been previously raised and accepted. Although the Fourth Amendment cases are not on all fours with Poe’s claim under the Fourteenth Amendment, they are instructive because they reveal that individuals retain significant privacy interests even in situations where privacy expectations are diminished.
Several of our cases involve viewings of unclothed or partially unclothed individuals for penological purposes. In
Forts v. Ward,
for example, we recognized that female inmates had a privacy interest in protecting themselves from “the involuntary viewing of private parts of the body” by prison guards of the opposite sex.
We have also indicated, although we have not held, that the publication of a photograph of a criminal suspect in the nude would violate the suspect’s constitutional right to privacy.
See Rosenberg v. Martin,
We cannot conceive of a more basic subject of privacy than the naked body. The desire to shield one’s unclothed figure from view of strangers, and particularly strangers of the opposite sex, is impelled by elementary self-respect and personal dignity.... We do not see how it can be argued that the searching of one’s home deprives him of privacy, but the photographing of one’s nude body, and the distribution of such photographs to strangers does not. Nor can we imagine a more arbitrary intrusion upon the security of that privacy than for a male police officer to unnecessarily photograph the nude body of a female citizen who has made complaint of an assault upon her....
Id. at 455. We find that these cases, read together, are sufficiently clear in establishing that there is a right to privacy in one’s unclothed or partially unclothed body, regardless whether that right is established *139 through the auspices of the Fourth Amendment or the Fourteenth Amendment.
Moreover, even if we did not have these cases on which to rely, we would find that Poe has independently asserted a violation of her substantive due process rights because Pearl’s behavior, if proven, “shocks the conscience.” The core protection provided by the Due Process Clause is protection against arbitrary government action. Thus, the “touchstone of due process is protection of the individual against ... the exercise of power without any reasonable justification in the service of a legitimate governmental objective.”
County of Sacramento,
Taking the facts most favorably to Poe, as we are required to do on a motion for summary judgment, it seems clear that Pearl manipulated the situation to ensure that Poe would be videotaped unclothed from the waist up: he told Poe to wear provocative clothing for her role in order to distract the trooper candidates and create a better training video; he encouraged her to bring several different outfits; even though she was already dressed provocatively, he encouraged her to change outfits; he told her to “lose the bra;” and he instructed her to change clothes in his office and then directed her to a precise spot to stand while doing so. Pearl did all this while purporting to act for the benefit of the police academy. Pearl’s conduct certainly qualifies as “conduct intended to injure in some way unjustifiable by any governmental interest,” which rises “to the conscience-shocking level.”
County of Sacramento,
We hold that Poe has alleged sufficient facts to raise a triable issue whether Pearl violated her constitutional right to privacy in her unclothed body and that her right to privacy in her unclothed body was clearly established at the time Pearl videotaped her. Although our prior cases have not presented exactly the same facts and the Supreme Court has advised that for qualified immunity purposes the right must be established “in a more particularized, and hence more relevant sense,”
Anderson v. Creighton,
*140 2. Supervisory Liability
A supervisor may not' be held liable under section 1983 merely because his subordinate committed a constitutional tort.
See Blyden v. Mancusi,
Leonard contends, however, that it has not been clearly established that a supervisor is required to review the personnel files of his subordinates. In addition, Leonard argues that it was not clearly established that a supervisor’s failure to provide special training to a subordinate in order to ensure that the subordinate would not commit a bizarre and possibly criminal act would violate the law. Finally, he asserts that our Circuit’s case law applying a gross negligence standard in the supervisory context is “spartan” and thus not something of which a reasonable supervisor would be aware.
Although we have held that a supervisor may be liable for either his gross negligence or deliberate indifference in supervising a subordinate who violates a person’s constitutional rights, we must determine whether it has been clearly es *141 tablished that Leonard’s failure to supervise Pearl more closely would violate Poe’s rights in the particularized context of the facts at hand. The essence of Poe’s claim rests on the concept of notice: either that Leonard had notice of sufficient facts to require him to do more or that he should have, by virtue of his supervisory position, investigated Pearl’s past further before permitting him to continue with the video assignment.
Case law
15
clearly establishes that a supervisor may be liable for failing to screen or otherwise inquire about his subordinates or into their actions.
See, e.g., Fiacco v. City of Rensselaer,
To establish that Leonard’s conduct violated the clearly established requirements we have just summarized, Poe relies primarily on Leonard’s failure to review Pearl’s personnel file, his failure to supervise Pearl more closely after viewing the static crime scene video, and Dr. Mayo’s opinion that these fadings fell short of proper police management standards. 16
First, we address whether Leonard’s failure to review Pearl’s personnel history, upon assuming his supervisory command, by itself, establishes a deliberate or reckless disregard of a high risk of a constitutional violation by Pearl. Prior case law indicates that a supervisor is not liable for failing to review an inherited subordinate’s personnel history upon assuming command, absent some independent reason for him to do so.
Rather than examining what a supervisor could have learned had he reviewed his subordinate’s personnel history, most courts have instead evaluated how the supervisor responded to the knowledge he possessed. In
Shaw v. Stroud,
We, however, have also found the existence of constructive notice dispositive. In
Wright v. Smith,
In some cases, notice will also be imputed to an individual because of the particular duties he is assigned by virtue of his position.
See Wright,
Defendant confuses a lack of knowledge of the failure of other officials to ensure plaintiffs constitutional rights with a lack of duty on his part to assure that the proceedings below were constitutionally sound. As the official designated to hear prisoners’ appeals, he had a duty to conduct at least a minimal investigation to determine whether there was any merit to plaintiffs appeal.
Id.
The court contrasted this defendant’s situation with that of a warden who had no responsibility to review the findings and procedures of a disciplinary committee and was thus found to have fulfilled his supervisory responsibilities.
Id.
at 21 n. 3. Because the reports the defendant supervisor requested as part of his duties were sufficient to have put the defendant on notice of the alleged constitutional violations, the defendant had recklessly disregarded the plaintiffs rights by failing to investigate his complaint.
Id.
at 21;
see also Greason v. Kemp,
One Circuit, however, found a supervisor ineligible for qualified immunity because he failed to conduct a background check on an applicant.
See Parker v. Williams,
*145
In addition to Leonard’s failure to review Pearl’s personnel file, Poe argues that once Leonard viewed the static crime scene video, with its overlong focus on the civilian victim’s upper thigh region, and learned of Pearl’s desire for Poe to show “a lot of cleavage” in her video, Leonard had sufficient notice of a problematic situation developing that his failure to supervise or train Pearl further amounted to gross negligence. But these facts simply do not provide the sort of actual or constructive notice that our cases, and those of other Circuits, have required.
See, e.g., Wright,
Third, Poe relies heavily on Dr. Mayo’s invocation of “recommended national standards” of police management to prove that' Leonard was grossly negligent in his supervision of Pearl. Dr. Mayo relies on such standards to establish that supervisors should, for example, review the personnel files of their subordinates when assuming command. Because Dr. Mayo’s testimony does not evince how Leonard acted or failed to act, but only how supervisors who follow his generalized principles of police management might act, it is of limited utility in assessing whether Leonard “knew” there was a high degree of risk that Pearl would behave inappropriately with a woman on assignment — a key question in the analysis we have identified. Construing the evidence most favorably to Poe, we find that the most she has established is that Leonard was negligent in not reviewing Pearl’s personnel file when Leonard had no indication that Pearl had prior problems interacting with civilian women. But mere negligence is insufficient as a matter of law to state a claim under section 1983.
See, e.g., Davidson v. Cannon,
Even considering all of Leonard’s failings together, construing all facts and drawing all reasonable inferences in Poe’s favor, we conclude that Poe has failed to proffer sufficient evidence to raise a triable issue regarding Leonard’s alleged gross negligence or deliberate indifference. The facts Poe alleges are insufficient as a matter of law to have put a reasonable supervisor on notice that there was a high risk that one of his subordinates would violate another’s constitutional rights. Accordingly, Poe fails to establish that Leonard acted with the sort of gross negligence or deliberate indifference necessary to support supervisory liability under clearly established law.
C. Was It Objectively Unreasonable for Leonard to Believe that his Conduct Did Not Violate the Law ?
Even if we found that Poe demonstrated that Leonard’s inactions violated clearly established law, we would conclude that Leonard was entitled to qualified immunity because his conduct was not objectively unreasonable. When evaluating a claim of qualified immunity, “the appropriate question is the objective inquiry of whether a reasonable officer could have believed that [his actions were] lawful, in light of clearly established law” and “the circumstances confronting [him] at the scene.”
Martinez v. Simonetti,
Reasonable supervisors confronted with the circumstances faced by Leonard could disagree as to the legality of his inaction. Indeed, even different circuits disagree about whether it is objectively reasonable for a supervisor, upon assuming his new post, to neglect to review his subordinates’ personnel histories.
Compare Shaw v. Stroud,
III. Admission of Expert Testimony
Leonard also appeals the District Court’s denial of his motion to exclude the testimony of Poe’s expert witness, Dr. Mayo. Because Leonard must accept Dr. Mayo’s testimony in order for us to have jurisdiction over this interlocutory appeal, we find that it is inappropriate for us to address this issue.
See Rein v. Socialist People’s Libyan Arab Jamahiriya,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that we have jurisdiction to review the merits of Leonard’s qualified immunity defense, and that his defense should be upheld as a matter of law. We reverse and remand to the District Court with instructions to dismiss with prejudice the complaint as to Captain John Leonard.
Notes
. Captain Leonard was the commanding officer of the police academy, the unit responsible for selecting new troopers, and the CSP polygraph unit. The project to revise the testing procedures began under Leonard’s predecessor, Major John Rearick.
. The CSP maintains two separate personnel files on each officer, a working file maintained at the officer's work unit, containing annual performance appraisals and administrative documents such as requests for leave, and a separate detailed official file kept at CSP headquarters. Although Leonard conceded that Pearl's unsatisfactory performance evaluation concerning the 1989 incident is of a type that would ordinarily be available to him as a supervisor, the record does not reveal whether this evaluation and the other reports documenting Pearl’s past misconduct were in Pearl's working file.
. It is unclear from the record whether Leonard's predecessor knew of Pearl's history. Leonard’s response to Poe's first set of interrogatories indicates that Major Rearick was Pearl’s supervisor from June 11, 1990 until October 3, 1992, a period that began after the date of the last problematic incident noted in Pearl's personnel file.
.In her statement of disputed material facts, Poe does not dispute these last two facts, but states that "Leonard should have been aware of Pearl's history of performance and/or disciplinary problems prior to the underlying'incident.” Pl.’s Statement of Disputed Material Facts ¶ 5. However, Poe fails to cite any factual support for this allegation, which is essentially a legal conclusion. In responding to a motion for summary judgment, once the mov-ant has established the absence of a disputed material issue, the nonmovant “may not rest upon [ ] mere allegations or denials” but "must set forth specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial.” Fed. R.Civ.P. 56(e); see
Weinstock v. Columbia Univ.,
. Poe also argues that upon viewing the static crime scene video, it "should have been obvious” to Leonard that Pearl and the "victim” were alone during the video shoot. There is nothing, however, in the crime scene video to suggest the presence or absence of: others besides Pearl and the motel employee. Assumptions are not facts and "unsupported allegations do not create a material issue of fact” for summary judgment purposes.
Wein-stock,
. After he had reviewed the sergeant's report, the lieutenant of his troop recommended that Pearl be found guilty of "Conduct Unbecoming an Officer” and be suspended. The Lieu *130 tenant did not discuss any “norm” but rather analyzed Pearl's "pattern of conduct” toward the complainant, which indicated that he made romantic advances toward her while on duty.
. The District Court denied Leonard’s motion in limine to exclude Dr. Mayo's testimony.
.
Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharms., Inc.,
. Although the "objective reasonableness” component of the qualified immunity inquiry
*133
may at times seem to merge with a factual inquiry on the merits, the Supreme Court has repeatedly cautioned that these are distinct questions and that the defense of qualified immunity must be evaluated early in the proceedings. See,
e.g., Saucier,
. In
Ford,
we noted that two prior decisions had examined "the clarity of the law allegedly violated by the subordinates [or co-officers] and then move[d] on to the objective reasonableness of the [supervisor’s or co-officer's] actions.”
Ford,
. Poe asserts that Leonard should not be permitted to argue that the constitutional right allegedly violated was not clearly established because he failed to appeal the District Court’s order denying his motion for judgment on the pleadings. His failure to do so, however, does not bar our review for at least two reasons. First, the Supreme Court has urged us to answer the threshold question of whether a violation of a constitutional right has been alleged when considering a qualified immunity claim.
See Saucier,
. We did not so hold (but merely assumed for purposes of the appeal), however, because the state defendants did not appeal the lower court order declaring such a right.
Forts,
. This was defined as a strip search including "a visual examination of the anal and genital areas of the person searched.”
. Although "gross negligence” and "deliberate indifference” at times are used interchangeably, they represent different degrees of intentional conduct on a continuum.
Doe v. Taylor Indep. Sch. Dist.,
. It is unclear the extent to which we may rely on the case law of other circuits to determine whether the law was clearly established. The Supreme Court cases from which the “clearly established” rule derives,
Anderson
and
Harlow,
do not provide a clear answer, as the
Anderson
Court does not discuss the issue,
. We have already discussed the lack of evidence that Leonard was aware of an alleged CSP policy or norm prohibiting a male officer from being alone with a civilian female.
. When Smith replaced Stroud, Stroud did not inform Smith of any of the excessive force complaints against the subordinate. See id. at 796.
