This appeal presents a problematic First Amendment question as to whether the plaintiff was a “limited-purpose public figure” required to prove actual malice in order to recover for defamation. After careful consideration of this, and other, issues, we reject the plaintiff’s appeal.
I. THE PREDICATE FACTS
Plaintiff-appellant Toney Pendleton, an African American in his mid-forties, hails from Haverhill, Massachusetts. He is well known in the community both because of his family ties and because of his exploits as a high-school athlete.
A. The Job Market.
Starting in the late 1980s, Pendleton tried to land a full-time teaching position in the Haverhill public school system. Although he worked as a substitute teacher from time to time, he progressed no further. In August 1993, he vented his frustration to a reporter, Anita Perkins, who found considerable irony in Pendleton’s inability to secure a permanent teaching position notwithstanding a student-led outcry for a more diverse public school faculty. She wrote an article to that effect in the Lawrence Eagle-Tribune, a newspaper serving the Haverhill area. See Anita Perkins, Black Teacher Has Grown Impatient Awaiting A Chance, Eagle-Trib., Aug. 17, 1993, at 13.
Perkins’s article profiled Pendleton and described his family, educational background, career aspirations, temporary teaching assignments, and his trepidation that school officials were not giving appropriate priority to minority hires. Reflecting on his experience as an African-American student in the Haverhill schools, Pendleton was quoted as saying: “Twenty years later things are still the same.” He also was quoted as asking, rhetorically: “How can you expect a black child who is called a ‘n_’ to go to a white counselor and teacher with his feelings?” The article commented on the dearth of minority teachers in the Haverhill schools, de *61 scribed some of the steps that Haverhill had taken to increase minority representation within the school system, and concluded with Pendleton’s plaintive comment: “I’m tired of substitute teaching. I just want a chance to show my qualifications.”
That fall, Pendleton accepted a Haverhill-based position as a vocational counselor with Jobs For Bay State Graduates, Inc. (JBSG), a private, nonprofit organization. JBSG counselors advise public school students who do not plan to attend college about career opportunities. Pendleton held this job at the time of his arrest.
B. Arrest and Prosecution.
On the evening of May 27,1994, Pendleton parked his ear on a busy, well-lit street in his home town, ran some errands, and then repaired to a local tavern. At some point, Arnaldo Pagan, a boyhood friend, asked Pen-dleton to give him a ride home. After Pagan grew increasingly insistent, Pendleton acquiesced. The two men then proceeded to Pendleton’s automobile. The vehicle was still parked when two Haverhill policemen on routine neighborhood patrol shined a flashlight into it. The officers, John Arahovites and Lawrence Newman, claimed that “two heads popped up” from behind the dashboard and that they noticed a powdery substance on Pendleton’s face. Upon further investigation, the officers observed powder on Pagan’s lap and throughout the car’s interior. They also saw a small bag containing what appeared to be cocaine on the floor of the vehicle. Based on these observations, the gendarmes promptly arrested Pendleton and Pagan.
Pendleton’s arrest made front-page news in both the Eagle-Tribune and a competing newspaper, the Haverhill Gazette. The stories revealed that charges of cocaine possession and conspiracy to violate the drug laws had been brought against Pendleton in the state district court. The articles described Pendleton as a “school jobs counselor” and a “high school advisor” who worked in a classroom five days a week with 30 to 40 high-school seniors.
Pendleton entered a not guilty plea. At a court hearing on July 12, 1994, he asserted that when Pagan, after entering his vehicle, produced a small plastic bag, he (Pendleton) suspected the bag contained drugs and slapped it out of Pagan’s hand. In turn, this act caused the contents to spill onto Pagan’s lap and scatter throughout the car. In responding to an unrelated inquiry from the court, the prosecutor admitted that, due to a mix-up, the powder seized from Pendleton’s car had not been tested. The judge obviously did not like what he had heard. He declared Pendleton not guilty and dismissed the charges.
C. Subsequent Events.
A flurry of media reports followed the case’s termination. In them, the district attorney’s office accused the police of bungling the investigation and the police chief responded that delays in laboratory testing are sometimes an inevitable concomitant of the evidence-gathering process. As part of this coverage, a local reporter interviewed Pen-dleton and his attorney. The lawyer theorized that Pendleton had been in the wrong place at the wrong time, and that he now could “get back to doing ... positive things in the community,” such as “helping kids.” Bill Burke, Pendleton Tells His Side: But Did Police Drop The Ball?, Haverhill Gazette, July 14, 1994, at Al. Pendleton asserted that he was “the happiest guy in America that my innocence has been borne out.” Id.
On July 18, the arresting officers responded to a call from the Eagle-Tribune. At the newspaper’s offices, Arahovites and Newman voiced indignation over the disposition of the charges, emphasizing that they had not been notified about the July 12 proceeding and expressing disappointment that the judge had refused to order Pendleton to undergo drug rehabilitation. See Bill Cantwell & Eileen Pendleton, Judge’s Release Of Suspect Outrages Police, Eagle-Trib., July 18, 1994, at 1. The article quoted Arahovites as saying that the police were “not trying to crucify Pendleton,” but “[t]hat guy should be in rehab right now.” Id. When arrested, Araho-vites said, Pendleton “had coke all over his face, from the tip of his chin to his eyebrows,” unlike “[a] first-time user [who] would not have had it all over his face.”
*62 The same article reported Arahovites’s claims that he had “never made an arrest where there was this much cocaine on a person’s face,” and that he had found- “a big bag of cocaine at [Pendleton’s] feet.” Id. Finally, the journalists noted Arahovites’s protest that the officers should not be held accountable for Pendleton’s predicament. In Arahovites’s words, “[t]hese guys [Pendleton and Pagan] were doing cocaine and they got caught. Period.” Id. Thus, despite the fact that Pendleton “was fighting for a school department job” and “outside forces [were] fighting for him to become a teacher,” he had only himself to blame if the negative publicity hampered his bid. Id.
On August 18, 1994, JBSG terminated Pendleton’s employment.
II. THE PROCEEDINGS BELOW
On December 19,1995, Pendleton sued the city of Haverhill, Arahovites, and Newman in the federal district court. 1 In pertinent part, his complaint invoked 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1994) and claimed that the officers’ post-acquittal statements to the press violated his constitutional rights. The complaint also alleged various state-law claims, including counts for defamation, infliction of emotional distress, invasion of privacy, negligence, negligent supervision, and malicious interference with employment relations.
After protracted pretrial discovery, the defendants moved for summary judgment. The district court, ruling from the bench, granted brevis disposition (i) in Newman’s favor on all claims, (ii) in Arahovites’s and the city’s favor with respect to the section 1983 claims, and (iii) exercising supplemental jurisdiction, see 28 U.S.C. § 1367(e), in the defendants’ favor on all other causes of action save for the defamation claim against Arahovites.
Trial on the surviving count commenced on October 27, 1997. At the conclusion of the evidence, the court entertained arguments as to whether Pendleton should be deemed a public figure, and if so, to what extent. Noting the nature of Pendleton’s work in the public schools, his stature in the Haverhill community, the fact that charges against him were a matter of public interest, and his willingness to “engage[] in th[e] process of communication in the form of a newspaper interview, just as the defendant did,” the court concluded that Pendleton was a limited-purpose public figure and instructed the jury accordingly. The jurors returned a take-nothing verdict. This appeal followed.
Pendleton now assigns error to the pretrial entry of partial summary judgment, three evidentiary rulings that occurred at trial, and the public figure status determination. We address his asseverations in accordance with these groupings.
III. THE PRETRIAL RULINGS
The district court granted summary judgment on seven of the enumerated counts lodged in Pendleton’s complaint. Pendleton does not challenge any of them as they pertain to Newman, but he does challenge four of the rulings as they pertain to Arahovites and Haverhill. We review these determinations de novo, taking the facts as they appeared in the summary judgment record in the light most hospitable to Pendleton.
See Elliott v. S.D. Warren Co.,
A. The Section 1983 Claims.
Section 1983 “provides a cause of action when an individual, acting under color of state law, deprives a person of federally assured rights.”
Camilo-Robles v. Hoyos,
The Supreme Court has determined authoritatively that defamation, even
*63
from the lips of a government actor, does not in and of itself transgress constitutionally assured rights.
See Paul v. Davis,
In the first place, to achieve a sufficient “plus” in a loss-of-job context, words spoken must be “uttered incident to the termination.”
Siegert v. Gilley,
In the second place, a violation of constitutional proportions under a “stigma plus” theory exists only if, and to the extent that, the opportunities lost are government benefices denied as a result of governmental action.
See Paul,
To the extent that Pendleton asserts section 1983 claims apart from his claim that Arahovites deprived him of a liberty interest, we dismiss them out of hand. Some of these claims (e.g., his allegations that the officers falsified their reports and acted out of racial animus) are simply unsupported by the evidence. Others (e.g., Pendleton’s assertion that his federal civil rights were violated because Arahovites spoke out in contravention of departmental rules) are legally impuissant.
See, e.g., Snowden v. Hughes,
B. The Tort Claims.
On appeal, Pendleton concedes the propriety of summary judgment on many of his state-law tort claims, but challenges the rejection of his claims for negligence, invasion of privacy, and malicious interference with *64 employment relations. The subject warrants scant comment.
To prevail on a negligence claim under Massachusetts law, a plaintiff must show (1) that the defendant owed him a duty, (2) that the defendant breached the duty, and (3) that the breach caused the plaintiffs injuries.
See Cannon v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.,
Pendleton’s malicious interference claim suffers from the same defect. And, moreover, Pendleton failed to proffer any evidence related to another essential element of this claim; the summary judgment record contains no proof that Arahovites knowingly attempted to induce JBSG to act.
See G.S. Enters., Inc. v. Falmouth Marine, Inc.,
The privacy claim is no more substantial. Pendleton never identified the specific statements that supposedly intrude upon his privacy, nor can we glean the essentials of an actionable claim from the summary judgment record. Massachusetts law prohibits unreasonable public disclosure of
private
information.
See
Mass. Gen. Laws. ch. 214, § IB;
see also Bratt v. International Bus. Mach. Corp.,
IV. THE EVIDENTIARY RULINGS
Pendleton challenges three evidentiary rulings. Two of these relate to the exclusion of evidence and the third relates to the admission of evidence. In each instance, we review the district court’s determination for abuse of discretion.
See Williams v. Drake,
A. Negative Drug Test Results.
At trial, Pendleton sought to introduce evidence that he tested negative for drugs on the Tuesday following his Friday night arrest. Arahovites objected on relevancy grounds. Judge O’Toole called counsel to the bench and asked Pendleton’s lawyer what the jury could conclude from this evidence. Counsel replied that the evidence tended to show that “he [Pendleton] doesn’t have a drug problem.” The judge then asked the lawyer: “Is it evidence that [Pen-dleton] did not ingest any amount of cocaine on Friday night?” The lawyer responded in the negative. After a further colloquy, the judge ruled that Pendleton could show “the fact of the test” and that he voluntarily arranged for it, but not the results.
We discern no misuse of discretion in the trial court’s exclusion of the test results. Relevant evidence is “evidence having any tendency to make the existence of any fact that is of consequence to the determination of the action more or less probable than it would be without the evidence.” Fed. R.Evid. 401. Since—as Pendleton readily admits—a negative test result on Tuesday lacks probative value as to whether Pendle-
*65
ton was using cocaine on the previous Friday, the court did not abuse its discretion in ruling that the test results were irrelevant to Arahovites’s statements about Pendleton’s cocaine use on the night of the arrest.
See, e.g., United States v. Levy-Cordero,
In this venue, Pendleton embroiders his argument, contending that he should have been allowed to introduce the negative test results as evidence tending to disprove Arahovites’s general suggestion that Pendleton had a drug problem. We disagree. Even if the officer’s opinion could be construed as defamatory — a matter on which we take no view,
see Fudge v. Penthouse Int’l, Ltd.,
B. Police Department Rules and Regulations.
Pendleton next challenges the trial court’s decision to exclude the testimony of Deputy Chief Shea, who Pendleton sought to question about the Haverhill police department’s rules regarding dissemination of information to the press. Pendleton offered Shea’s testimony to assist in establishing malice. Specifically, Pendleton’s counsel told the court that this testimony would show “how deeply [Arahovites] felt about [speaking out], how much he wanted to do it, that he would violate all of these rules” against talking to the press.
This iteration of relevancy misapprehends the concept of “actual malice” in defamation law. In the defamation context, “malice” does not relate to the defendant’s motive for speaking, or even to whether the defendant made the challenged statement out of ill-will. Rather, “malice” for this purpose requires proof that the speaker published the statement with knowledge of its falsity or with reckless disregard as to whether it was false.
See St. Amant v. Thompson,
C. The Second Bag of Cocaine.
During Arahovites’s direct examination, the following snippet of testimony emerged:
DEFENSE COUNSEL: Do you know what evidence was obtained at the time of the arrest of Mr. Pendleton by you or Officer Newman?
ARAHOVITES: Yes.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: What was it?
ARAHOVITES: The bag of cocaine— there was one bag of cocaine that was found in the ear that was charged to Mr. Pendleton, and there was another bag of cocaine that was found in the back seat of our police cruiser.... There was another bag of cocaine that came from Mr. Pagan that was in the back seat of our cruiser.
Pendleton objected to this testimony on relevancy grounds and argues here that evidence regarding the second bag of cocaine was both irrelevant and prejudicial. He is half-right: *66 the evidence was irrelevant and the objection should have been sustained.
Pendleton is also half-wrong: the error was benign. The second bag of cocaine was mentioned to the jury only once.
6
In that passage, quoted above, Arahovites made it crystal clear that the second bag belonged to Pagan, not Pendleton. This fact dovetailed with — and arguably bolstered — Pendleton’s assertion that Pagan was the drug user and that he {Pendleton) was merely an innocent bystander. Under the circumstances, we conclude that the error in permitting Araho-vites’s statement to stand was harmless and does not warrant a new trial.
See United States v. Ladd,
Y. THE STATUS DETERMINATION
The principal issue on appeal concerns the correctness of the lower court’s determination that Pendleton was a limited purpose public figure. Pendleton challenges both the judge’s authority to make this determination (rather than submit the question to the jury) and the substance of the determination itself. We subdivide our analysis into three segments, plotting the legal landscape and tackling Pendleton’s procedural point before grappling with the merits.
A. The Legal Landscape.
In an effort to strike a balance between First Amendment freedoms and state defamation laws, our jurisprudence accords de-cretory significance to the status of each individual plaintiff. Under the taxonomy developed by the Supreme Court, private plaintiffs can succeed in defamation actions on a state-set standard of proof (typically, negligence), whereas the Constitution imposes a higher hurdle for public figures and requires them to prove actual malice.
See Gertz v. Robert Welch, Inc.,
In 1964, the Court considered for the first time the issue of “the extent to which the constitutional protections for speech and press limit a State’s power to award damages in a libel action brought by a public official against critics of his official conduct.”
New York Times,
Two years later, the Court found occasion to consider who qualified as a “public official” for the purpose of applying the
New York Times
rule. In
Rosenblatt v. Baer,
During its next term, the Court extended the
New York Times
rule to defamation eases in which the plaintiff, though not a government official, was a “public figure.”
Curtis Pub. Co. v. Butts,
After some short-lived experimentation,
see, e.g., Rosenbloom v. Metromedia, Inc.,
B. Judge or Jury.
Turning from the general to the particular, we first mull Pendleton’s claim that Judge O’Toole usurped the jury’s province by making the public figure determination himself. In addressing this issue, we do not write on a pristine page. The
Rosenblatt
Court declared that “it is for the trial judge in the first instance to determine whether the proofs show [the plaintiff] to be a ‘public official,’ ”
Ignoring these authorities, Pendleton exhorts us to adopt the more particularized interpretation of the
Rosenblatt
rule explicated in
Stone v. Essex County Newspapers, Inc.,
We reject Pendleton’s importuning. The principal problem with his argument is that it assumes (wrongly, we believe) that the question of whether a person is sufficiently entangled in a public controversy to qualify him as a limited-purpose public figure is for the jury. That question is of constitutional dimension and, thus, federal law controls. Consistent with the federal precedents assembled above, which illustrate that the status issue is treated in federal defamation jurisprudence as a question of law, we hold that the question of whether a defamation plaintiff is a public figure is properly resolved by the court, not by the jury, regardless of the contestability of the predicate facts.
In this case, moreover, all roads lead to Rome. The record reveals complete accord as to who Pendleton was and what he did and said both before and after the events of May 27, 1994. There is no conflict as to any material fact; the issue is whether the discerned facts suffice to establish that Pendleton acted in a way sufficient to make him a public figure for the purpose of this defamation action (say, by previously achieving pervasive fame and notoriety, or by injecting himself into a public controversy). We have no doubt that this archetypical legal question is exactly the sort of inquiry that the Rosenblatt Court intended the judge to handle. Hence, the trial court did not err in ruling directly on the public figure question.
C. Pendleton’s Status.
We turn now to the efficacy of Judge O’Toole’s determination that Pendleton, although not a public official, was a limited-purpose public figure. As with other questions of law, we afford plenary review to this determination.
See McCarthy v. Azure,
Some of the arguments advanced in support of the proposition that Pendleton was a limited-purpose public figure are canards. It is by now apodictic that an individual’s involvement in a criminal proceeding— even one that attracts substantial notoriety— is not enough, in itself, to ingeminate public figure status.
See Wolston v. Reader’s Digest Ass’n,
These false starts notwithstanding, we glean from the appellees’ briefs and the trial court’s bench decision several other suggested bases on which the court’s decision arguably might rest. Rather than canvassing the universe of possibilities, we proceed directly to the strongest argument in support of this determination, mindful that an appellate court possesses the power to affirm a lower court’s rulings of law on any independent ground made manifest by the record.
See Polyplastics, Inc. v. Transconex, Inc.,
In mid-1993, Pendleton effectively announced his candidacy to become a permanent teacher within the Haverhill school system. He proclaimed as much in a newspaper story (entitled “Black Teacher Has Grown Impatient Awaiting A Chance”) that featured him and his aspiration. Although the record is bereft of information regarding the genesis of this published profile, the article speaks eloquently for itself.
Its author, Anita Perkins, describes a school system employing 480 full-time teachers, only 15 of whom are minorities, to instruct 7,500 pupils, approximately 1,050 of whom are minorities. Perkins reports Pen-dleton’s avowal that the Haverhill school system, in which minorities account for 14% of the student body but only 3% of the faculty, *69 is not taking appropriate steps to increase the number of minority instructors. In Pen-dleton’s opinion, “school officials are not making minority hirings a priority,” — a failing that he says leaves minority students without suitable role models.
The gist of the article is that Pendleton, a Haverhill native with a degree from the University of Massachusetts and ample experience working with Haverhill youths, should be given a teaching opportunity. Perkins discusses Pendleton’s “lifelong dream of teaching in the schools that gave him and his family so much,” and explains that, despite completing two years as a substitute teacher in a Haverhill school, “three attempts to land a really permanent position in the city schools failed.” The article concludes with Pendleton’s poignant lament: “I am tired of substitute teaching. I just want a chance to show my qualifications.”
In addition to conveying Pendleton’s views, Perkins reported that, following a recent spate of racially tinged incidents at Haverhill High School, students of all hues “called for more minority teachers, a recommendation school officials said they would heed.” This, and similar statements in the article, make it transparently clear that the racial attributes of the teacher-pupil mix by then had become a matter of public concern. This circumstance possesses great significance for a First Amendment analysis: by granting an interview to Perkins and lobbying for a permanent teaching post at a time when the racial composition of the public school faculty had become a matter of intense interest in the community, Pendleton invited public scrutiny of the qualities that equipped him to teach in the Haverhill school system. Accordingly, he became a public figure for that limited purpose.
We base this conclusion, in part, on the case law concerning candidates for public office.
Monitor Patriot Co. v. Roy,
We believe that, by analogy, these holdings are instructive in respect to the circumstances at bar. Of course, unlike the candidates in
Monitor Patriot
and
Ocala Star-Banner,
Pendleton was not running for an-elected political office — but it is at least arguable that if a person holds (or aspires to hold)' any public post which entails control over matters of substantial public concern, then his qualifications for serving in that capacity are likely to engender the type of public debate and discussion that the First Amendment protects.
See Rosenblatt,
Here, however, we need not rely solely on this rationale. The Perkins article leaves no doubt that an independent public controversy existed within Haverhill regarding the need to increase minority faculty representation and the adequacy of the measures employed by school officials to that end. Pendleton voluntarily injected himself into this preexisting controversy in at least three ways: by making (and authorizing the publication of) statements bearing on the issue; by airing his qualifications in a manner calculated to suggest that hiring him would ameliorate the problem; and by seeking to influence public opinion not only on the desir *70 ability of more minority hires, but also on the virtues of his own candidacy for such employment. In short, when Pendleton stated, “I just want a chance to show my qualifications,” he invited public debate both on the general issue of minority representation and on the specific characteristics that made him suitable (or not) for a teaching position.
We think that this conclusion comports comfortably with the teachings of
Gertz.
Pendleton had “access to the channels of effective communication,”
To be sure, there may be a temporal dimension to any “limited-purpose public figure” analysis. Intuitively, one should not become fair game for eternity merely by injecting oneself into the debate of the moment.
Cf. Rosenblatt,
Under the circumstances, Pendleton became a limited-purpose public figure whose alleged peccadilloes, even if falsely portrayed, were fair game in the absence of actual malice. Consequently, those with information bearing on Pendleton’s qualifications for a teaching position should not be punished for speaking out, absent evidence that they knowingly or recklessly disseminated falsehoods. It follows that, because Ara-hovites’s allegedly defamatory statements relate directly to Pendleton’s qualifications for the public position to which he aspired
9
and by extension to the controversy which swirled around that position — a controversy into which Pendleton had thrust himself — the district court correctly applied the
New York Times
rule.
Cf. Monitor Patriot,
Let us be perfectly clear. Our conclusion here, as in most public figure cases, is fact-bound and restricted to the specific circumstances revealed in the record.
See Bruno & Stillman,
We need go no further. Pendleton made himself a public figure by voluntarily stepping into the midst of an ongoing controversy and inviting the citizenry to judge his bid to become a teacher. Having extended that invitation, he assumed the risk that the ensuing discourse might contain errors of fact— errors for which the speakers, in the absence of a showing of actual malice, could not be held liable. Hence, the court below did not err in requiring Pendleton to prove actual malice as an element of his defamation action.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Pendleton also sued JBSG for wrongful termination of employment. Inasmuch as the parties settled this claim on the eve of trial, we omit all further reference to it.
. As an at-will employee of a private nonprofit organization, Pendleton had no constitutionally protected property interest in the job that he lost.
. In all events, at the summary judgment stage Pendleton relied on sheer speculation and failed to establish any tangible connection between Ar-ahovites's statements and his ouster at the hands of JBSG’s president, Mary Connelly (who gave a myriad of other reasons for JBSG's decision).
. Pendleton would fare no better if he attempted to recast the harm suffered as the loss of a future opportunity to work as a teacher in the Haverhill school system.
Siegert
stands for the proposition that, in comparable circumstances, impairment of “future employment prospects" does not constitute a constitutional deprivation.
. At the expense of carting coal to Newcastle, we note that we have carefully reviewed the rules and regulations identified by Pendleton, and harbor serious doubts that Arahovites could be said to have violated any of them.
. We think it noteworthy that Arahovites’s counsel never mentioned the second bag of cocaine in opening or closing arguments, nor did he in any way attempt to conjoin that evidence with Pen-dleton’s alleged drug use.
. The
Gertz
Court mentioned a third category — a person who becomes a public figure “through no purposeful action of his own”- — but commented that "the instances of truly involuntary public figures must be exceedingly rare.”
. In Stone, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court ventured that
a full statement of the [Rosenblatt ] rule would seem to be that the question whether the plaintiff is a public official or a public figure is one for the court to answer whenever (a) all of the facts bearing thereon are uncontested or agreed by the parties!,] (b) the case is tried before a judge without a jury, or (c) all of the facts bearing thereon are specially found and reported by the jury by way of answers to special questions submitted to them....
Stone,
. Indeed, Arahoviles comments were explicitly linked to Pendleton’s well-known "fight[] for a school department job.”
