Phillip and Susan Fry brought this action against various officials of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), a Special Assistant United States Attorney and other persons who were not federal officials, alleging violations of constitutional rights. Three IRS attorneys and one IRS revenue agent now appeal from the district court’s denial of their claim of qualified immunity. We reverse and remand with instructions to dismiss the complaint against these defendants insofar as it seeks to impose damage liability.
I
Phillip Fry is a tax accountant and an author. He has written several publications discussing methods of minimizing one’s tax liabilities,
1
has appeared on television and radio programs, has testified against the current gift and estate tax structure in congressional hearings and has marketed a variety of tax shelters. In 1986, Fry was charged in a seventeen-count indictment with conspiracy to defraud the government and other tax-related offenses based on selling illegal tax shelters. Fry pled guilty to one count of conspiracy and received a five-year sentence, which the Sixth Circuit affirmed.
See United States v. Fry,
While Fry was in jail, the IRS audited his and his wife Susan’s income tax returns for the years 1977 to 1980. The IRS determined that the Frys owed a substantial amount of taxes and sent them notices of tax deficiencies. The Frys challenged these deficiencies in Tax Court. The Tax Court litigation was resolved adversely to Fry during the pendency of this appeal.
See Fry v. Commissioner,
In 1989, the Frys, proceeding pro se, brought this Bivens 2 action for damages, declaratory and injunctive relief against thirteen federal defendants and two non-federal defendants claiming violations of their first, fourth and fifth amendment rights. The 74-page complaint charges that various IRS employees, revenue agents and attorneys had acted against them in retaliation for the Frys’ extensive exercise of first amendment rights. 3 The federal defendants moved to dismiss the action on the grounds of improper service of process, lack of personal jurisdiction, insufficient pleading specificity, failure to state a claim and qualified immunity. The district court granted the motion in part, dismissing the action, without prejudice, as to nine of the federal defendants on grounds of improper service. 4 The court also dismissed the fifth amendment due process claims on the grounds that a Bivens action is not available when Congress has provided a comprehensive remedial scheme. With regard to the federal defendants’ claim of immunity from suit, the district court held that it was “too early to resolve this issue” and that the “complaint details the manner which various defendants violated Fry’s clearly established *835 First Amendment rights and defendants obviously have not come forward with controverting evidence.”
Defendants Otto, Barnes and Pendery, the IRS attorneys who represented the Commissioner of Internal Revenue in the Frys’ Tax Court case, and Melaragno, an IRS revenue agent who participated in the audit and investigation of the Frys and also testified at the Tax Court trial, remained in the case. These four defendants now appeal the district court’s holding that they do not enjoy immunity from suit.
II
Although an order denying a motion to dismiss is not a “final decision” as that term is ordinarily used in 28 U.S.C. § 1291, the denial of a claim to qualified immunity is appealable under the collateral order doctrine recognized in
Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corporation,
III
The government contends that the action against the four remaining defendants must be dismissed on grounds of absolute immunity. The government ae-knowledges that it did not make this argument in the district court, but urges us to consider the issue on appeal. As a general rule, we will not consider an issue raised for the first time on appeal, although we have the power and discretion to do so.
Bolker v. Commissioner,
A
When considering claims of governmental immunity, “[t]he presumption is that qualified rather than absolute immunity is sufficient to protect government officials in the exercise of their duties.”
Burns v. Reed,
— U.S. —, —,
The Frys’ allegations against the IRS attorneys are based solely upon the attorneys’ official conduct representing the government in the litigation in the Tax Court of Fry v. Commissioner. It is therefore the government’s position that these attorneys fall within the class of government officials whose connection with the judicial process entitles them to absolute immunity. We agree.
We addressed the immunity of government attorneys involved in civil tax litigation in
Flood v. Harrington,
On appeal, we noted that “[f]rom the pleadings it is clear that [Flood’s] allegations against [the] defendants ... were based entirely upon their official conduct as attorneys for the government.”
Id.
We then considered
Imbler v. Pachtman,
Subsequent decisions confirm the continuing vitality of
Flood.
Of particular significance is
Butz v. Economou,
With regard to agency attorneys, the Court would “see no substantial difference between the function of the agency attorney in presenting evidence in an agency hearing and the function of the prosecutor who brings evidence before a court.”
Id.
at 516,
In either case, the evidence will be subject to attack through cross-examination, rebuttal, or reinterpretation by opposing counsel. Evidence which is false or unpersuasive should be rejected upon analysis by an impartial trier of fact. If agency attorneys were held personally liable in damages as guarantors of the quality of their evidence, they might hesitate to bring forward some witnesses or documents.... We therefore hold that an agency attorney who arranges for the presentation of evidence on the record in the course of an adjudication is absolutely immune from suits based on the introduction of such evidence.
Id.
at 516-17,
We therefore agree with the Second Circuit, as it stated in
Barrett v. United States,
The Court’s recent decision in
Burns
confirms that the touchstone of this immunity is whether the attorney’s actions are “intimately” or “closely” associated with the judicial process.
See Burns,
With the foregoing in mind, we turn to the case at hand. The Frys’ allegations against Otto, Barnes and Pendery are based entirely upon their official conduct as attorneys for the IRS in the Tax Court litigation. The alleged wrongful acts include statements about and repeated references to the Frys’ first amendment activities (books, pamphlets, speeches, seminars, *838 TV and radio appearances and testimony in congressional hearings) in various papers filed with the Tax Court, including a Motion to Continue the Tax Court trial, a Request for Admissions, a response to interrogatories, the Trial Memorandum and the “Respondents Brief.” The Frys also complain about questions concerning these activities during discovery and at the Tax Court trial (to which they entered several successful objections on relevance grounds 8 ), the government’s calling as a witness the host of a talk show on which Fry had appeared, the government’s plans to call as a witness a writer whom Fry had solicited to write a book on sex and the government’s subpoenaing all books the Frys had written. Finally, the Frys complain of misrepresentations and mischarac-terizations in briefs and other court filings.
This conduct, all of which occurred during the adjudication of their tax liabilities and as part of the government’s presentation of evidence against them, undoubtedly is “intimately associated with the judicial phases” of the tax litigation. We therefore uphold the IRS attorney defendants’ claim of absolute immunity.
See Butz,
B
With regard to defendant Melaragno, he does not enjoy absolute immunity as an IRS revenue agent.
See Todd,
[G]overnment officials performing discretionary functions generally are shielded 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,
[u]nless the plaintiff’s allegations state a claim of violation of clearly established law, a defendant pleading qualified immunity is entitled to dismissal before the commencement of discovery.... The entitlement is an immunity from suit rather than a mere defense to liability; and like an absolute immunity, it is effectively lost if a case is erroneously permitted to go to trial.
Mitchell,
The complaint describes Melaragno as “a revenue agent for the I.R.S. who spent many years investigating the tax planning and First Amendment-protected activities of Fry.” Complaint ¶ 8, at 5. Specifically, Fry complains that Melaragno conspired *839 with others to charge him with false criminal charges; that with two other defendants he inserted into the prosecutor’s version of the presentence report details about his first amendment activities which encouraged parole commission employees to retaliate against Fry and keep him in prison twice as long as the prosecutor had promised; intentionally lied and made misrepresentations to the probation officer preparing his presentence report; and helped the attorneys and investigators gather evidence for the tax litigation which included the book on sex.
Although Melaragno was involved in the investigation of the Frys, he does not have authority to cause criminal charges to be brought. As a result, Melaragno, like agent Harrington in the
Flood
case, “cannot be held liable for ‘causing’ the prosecution in
[United States v. Fry].
The responsibility for that prosecution lay with the United States Attorney General or his delegate.”
Flood,
Frys’ other allegations against Melaragno do not survive the requirement that the pleadings reveal a violation of clearly established law. We cannot imagine how the alleged wrongful acts, such as gathering evidence for the tax court trial and communicating details of his investigation to persons involved in Fry’s sentencing, infringed clearly established rights under the first amendment. Nor do they suggest that Melaragno acted in a way which he should have known was clearly unlawful. Melar-agno is entitled to qualified immunity from suit.
IV
Although we have held that Otto, Barnes and Pendery are entitled to absolute immunity, and that Melaragno enjoys qualified immunity, this protection only shields them from liability for damages and does not bar an action for declaratory or prospective injunctive relief.
Ashelman v. Pope,
REVERSED and REMANDED.
Notes
. Some of his titles, most coauthored with his wife Susan Fry, include: Pay No Income Taxes Without Going to Jail, Our Lady of Perpetual Deductions: How to Cut Your Taxes by Establishing Your Own Church, How to Disinherit the IRS & Probate Court, Blood Taxes At Harvest Times and How to Find & Profit from Real Estate Bargains.
.
Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents,
. The complaint alleges that the defendants committed overt acts against both him and his wife in an effort to:
(1) prosecute and imprison Fry on trumped-up tax fraud charges; (2) keep Fry in prison for as long as possible; (3) make Fry’s prison life as difficult as possible; (4) financially ruin Fry and his wife Susan by issuing trumped-up, incorrect, multi-million dollar Notices of (tax) Deficiency against the Frys, ...; (5) engage in unfair actions during the Frys' Tax Court case in their effort to obtain a wrongful multi-million dollar Tax Court judgment against the Frys; and (6) try to prevent Fry from resuming his career as a tax accountant, writer, and speaker when he was released from federal prison in July, 1989.
Complaint ¶ 1 at 2-3. The remainder of the complaint detailed the specific actions of each of the defendants taken in what Fry has termed a "lawless and arbitrary vendetta fueled by the power of the state."
.The defendants who allegedly violated the Frys’ fourth amendment rights were among those dismissed from the suit.
. Our decision to address the issue of absolute immunity is also consistent with the policy of protecting certain government officers from the obligation of having to defend suits stemming from the exercise of their official duties. "[T]he essence of absolute immunity is its possessor's entitlement not to have to answer for his conduct in a civil damages action."
Mitchell,
. In doing so, the Court employs a ''functional" approach.
Forrester
v.
White,
. The Court also deemed it "untenable to draw a distinction for purposes of immunity law between suits brought against state officials under § 1983 and suits brought directly under the Constitution against federal officials.”
Butz,
. The judge sustained the Frys’ objections to this material, and at one point stated that "the fact that a person protests against the tax laws or writes literature about the tax laws has no relevance as to whether they owe taxes in a particular year...." Complaint ¶ 80, at 42.
. Melaragno is entitled to absolute immunity to the extent the allegations against him pertain to his testimony as a witness in the Tax Court trial.
See Mitchell,
