OPINION OF THE COURT
The issue before us is whether we have jurisdiction from the order of the District Court denying Defendants’/Appellants’ claim of qualified immunity.
I.
Appellee Robert Reilly, a former Atlantic City police officer, filed suit against Robert Flipping, the Director of Public Safety, and Arthur Snellbaker, the Chief of Police, claiming that they retaliated against him for his participation, including trial testimony, in an investigation conducted jointly by state and local police a decade earlier. The claimed retaliation consisted of the formal recommendation by Flipping and Snellbaker that Reilly be demoted from his position as sergeant and be suspended for ninety days notwithstanding the recommendation of an independent hearing officer, following an extensive investigation, that Reilly serve a four-day *220 suspension for violating police department regulations. Reilly, who accepted Flipping’s offer that he retire as a sergeant instead of being disciplined, then filed this suit claiming that Appellants’ actions violated his First Amendment free speech rights and his Fourteenth Amendment right to procedural due process.
The District Court partially denied Appellants’ motions for summary judgment. In the procedural posture of this appeal, we cannot decide the merits of Reilly’s retaliation claim or of the various defenses thereto put forward by Appellants because we are limited to issues of law underlying the qualified immunity claims. Nonetheless, in deciding the jurisdiction issue, we must necessarily consider Appellants’ contention that the District Court erred in holding Reilly’s trial testimony was protected by the First Amendment and erred in holding Reilly’s allegedly forced retirement gives rise to a claim for the violation of his Fourteenth Amendment right to procedural due process, because these are issues of law underlying Appellants’ qualified immunity claims.
II.
Reilly was an Atlantic City police officer from 1978 until his resignation on June 1, 2003. Flipping, an Atlantic City police officer, was the Director of Public Safety for Atlantic City at the time of Reilly’s resignation. Snellbaker, also an Atlantic City police officer, was the Chief of the Atlantic City Police Department at the time that Reilly resigned.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, while Reilly was a member of the vice and intelligence units, he had a role in several investigations that targeted Flipping or individuals close to him. 1 The highly publicized investigation of corruption in the Atlantic City Police Department focused on Dennis Munoz, Flipping’s friend and colleague. The Munoz investigation was conducted by the state police with the assistance of personnel in the Atlantic City Police Department. One of Reilly’s informants, a prostitute named Lori Ann Jones who alleged that Munoz acted as her pimp, provided the basis of the state’s case against Munoz. Reilly was called to testify as a witness for the prosecution in the resulting trial. Flipping, who was one of Munoz’s supervisors in the vice section, was also a suspect in the investigation but was never charged. Flipping assisted Munoz’s defense by providing Munoz’s lawyer with information about witnesses against Munoz; he also testified for Munoz at the trial. Flipping was aware that Reilly was involved in the Munoz case and may have heard Reilly’s testimony at the trial.
Reilly alleges Snellbaker’s animus toward him stems from Snellbaker’s dislike of James DiNoto, a former Chief of the Atlantic City Police Department, who was Reilly’s mentor in the department. There is some evidence that DiNoto was also involved in the Munoz investigation. Flipping and Snellbaker had contentious relationships with DiNoto. In 1998, they were plaintiffs in a lawsuit alleging retaliation and due process claims against DiNoto, in part based on Flipping’s testimony at the Munoz trial.
See McCullough v. City of Atlantic City,
In November 2000, Reilly was charged with engaging in inappropriate conduct toward a subordinate, Officer Kelly Buzby, creating a hostile work environment, making untruthful statements to Internal Affairs, and improperly contacting witnesses. The matter was referred to an independent hearing officer, Willis Flower, a local attorney. Flower held a hearing at which at least twelve persons testified. In a twenty-eight page opinion dated February 14, 2003, Flower made numerous findings of fact and conclusions of law. He dismissed the charges that Reilly had made untruthful statements and improperly contacted witnesses, but found that Reilly had “engaged in conduct which derided and belittled [Buzby] and made offensive, derogatory and sexually explicit comments toward women while in the presence of [Buzby] and other subordinate officers” in violation of the police department’s rules and regulations. Flipping App. at 215. Nonetheless, Flower found that “the objective facts of th[e] case, taken in a vacuum, do not present a fair picture of what actually occurred. In short, the surrounding circumstances go a long way to explain and mitigate the literal violations.” Flipping App. at 241. Thus, he concluded that “dismissal, reduction in rank or lengthy suspension is not called for here.” Flipping App. at 241. Instead, he recommended “a four day suspension without pay” as discipline. Flipping App. at 241.
There is evidence that Snellbaker was displeased that Flower had made a disciplinary recommendation, apparently because he believed that exceeded Flower’s role. In a letter to Flipping dated February 24, 2003, Snellbaker emphasized the violations of which Reilly had been found guilty. Significantly, he did not discuss the charges that Flower had dismissed, Flower’s disciplinary recommendation, or Flower’s explanation of the mitigating circumstances and context of Reilly’s behavior. He also did not view Reilly’s disciplinary history before making his recommendation. Snellbaker concluded that he could “not overlook the egregious and reprehensible conduct of a superior towards the most impressionable of his subordinates,” Flipping App. at 243, and thus he recommended a reduction in rank.
Flipping asserts that he waited for Snellbaker’s recommendation before reading the recommendation in the Flower report. After receiving Snellbaker’s recommendation, Flipping had the assistant personnel director obtain a copy of what purported to be Reilly’s disciplinary history from the City personnel office on February 26, 2003. The City’s personnel director testified that the document Flipping relied upon did not look like something prepared by her office. The document Flipping obtained contained substantial inaccuracies, such as the inclusion of a thirty-day suspension which had been rescinded and which nearly tripled the number of days Reilly had actually been suspended. Flipping asserts that he did not know the document was inaccurate at the time he prepared his recommendation.
On March 7, 2003, Flipping sent two letters to the City’s Business Administrator. One recommended that Reilly be removed from the promotion list; the other *222 recommended that he be suspended for ninety days and demoted from sergeant to patrolman. In his letters, Flipping referred to the violations which Flower found Reilly had committed but Flipping omitted mention of the charges against Reilly that Flower had dismissed. One letter stated that Reilly had “exhibited behavior throughout his career that indicates racism, bigotry, sexism, lack of impartiality toward the public, irresponsibility, bringing the department into disrepute, failures to perform lawful duties from competent authority as directed and failures to treat others with respect.” Flipping App. at 248. Many of these characterizations appear to have been exaggerated. The only evidence of racism in Reilly’s record (which consists of Reilly’s unarguably inaccurate disciplinary history) was an allegation from 1979 that Reilly had made remarks of a racial nature.
Although Reilly had not been disciplined or charged with any violations from 1985 until the Buzby incident in 2000, Flipping’s letter asserted that this “seeming ‘hiatus’ during the middle of his career should not mislead anyone into believing that this is a history of unrelated or isolated incidents or that Reilly’s behavior has changed or improved.... For reasons unknown (perhaps related to previous administrations’ lapse or malaise) no appropriate action was taken against Reilly’s insidious behavior.” 2 Flipping App. at 248. Flipping did not mention that Reilly’s most recent performance evaluation (August 2002) contained his supervisor’s highest possible evaluation for his performance and the supervisor’s statements that Reilly was first on the list for promotion to captain and that “[t]he only way Sgt. Reilly’s job performance could be improved is promotion.” Flipping App. at 296.
Some time after sending his letters to the City’s Business Administrator, Flipping informed Reilly’s attorney of his disciplinary recommendation. The attorney told Reilly that Flipping would allow him to retire as a sergeant if he retired immediately. After a period of negotiation, on May 30, 2003, Reilly signed a consent agreement providing for his retirement. In his deposition, Reilly explained, “I felt compelled to sign [the agreement] because I just gave up. I threw my arms up, I said I had enough. After being beat down for all those years ... I gave up.” Flipping App. at 115. As part of that agreement, Reilly received his pension and a lump sum payment due him.
Shortly thereafter, Reilly filed a lawsuit against the City of Atlantic City, Flipping, Snellbaker, and another police officer, Joseph McCullough. 3 The complaint, filed in part pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleged violation of Reilly’s First Amendment right to speak about matters of public concern, his Fourteenth Amendment rights to substantive and procedural due process, conspiracy under 42 U.S.C. § 1985, violation of New Jersey’s Conscientious Employee Protection Act (“CEPA”), civil conspiracy, and arbitrary and illegal discipline. The District Court dismissed Reilly’s substantive due process claim and his civil conspiracy claim in June 2004, and Reilly settled with McCullough in October 2005.
On April 5, 2006, the District Court granted Appellants’ motions for summary judgment on the § 1985 claim.
Reilly v. City of Atlantic City,
III.
The District Court had jurisdiction over Reilly’s federal civil rights claims pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331 and 1343(a)(3), and over the pendent state law claims pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1367. Our jurisdiction is contested, and will be addressed presently. To the extent that we have jurisdiction, we exercise plenary review over a denial of summary judgment based on a lack of qualified immunity.
Eddy v. V.I. Water & Power Auth.,
IV.
Shortly after these appeals were filed, Reilly filed motions to dismiss them for lack of appellate jurisdiction. A motion panel of this court denied those motions. In his appeal briefs, Reilly renews his argument that the appeals should be dismissed for want of jurisdiction.
As an initial matter, we consider briefly Snellbaker’s contention that Reilly’s jurisdictional argument is barred by the law of the case doctrine because the motion panel denied Reilly’s earlier motions to dismiss asserting the same jurisdictional argument. Snellbaker relies on our decisions applying the law of the case doctrine to merits issues decided in the course of disposing of prior appeals.
See Africa v. City of Philadelphia (In re City of Philadelphia Litig.),
The determination whether a public official is entitled to qualified immunity involves a two-step analysis. First, the court must “decide ‘whether a constitutional right would have been violated on the facts alleged....’”
Doe v. Groody,
Ordinarily, denial of summary judgment would not be a final appealable order, but the Supreme Court has held that “a district court’s denial of a claim of qualified immunity,
to the extent that it turns on an issue of law,
is an appealable ‘final decision’ within the meaning of 28 U.S.C. § 1291 notwithstanding the absence of a final judgment.”
Mitchell v. Forsyth,
Because the collateral order doctrine which was the basis for the
Forsyth
opinion provides only limited appellate jurisdiction, courts of appeals must determine whether an appeal pursuant to that doctrine presents an issue of law or challenges a district court’s conclusion that “there is sufficient record evidence to support a set of facts under which there would be no immunity.”
Schieber v. City of Philadelphia,
V.
Reilly alleges that Flipping and Snell-baker retaliated against him for exercising his First Amendment rights in the context of the Munoz investigation and trial. As the District Court succinctly stated, Reilly claims Appellants “severely increased the discipline he was to receive for the sexual harassment incident, which effectively forced his retirement, in retaliation for his participation in the Munoz investigation and trial.”
Reilly,
The District Court evaluated Reilly’s First Amendment retaliation claim under the following three-step framework: (1) the employee must demonstrate that his/ her speech is protected, that is, it addresses a matter of public concern and the “employee’s interest in the speech outweighs” the employer’s countervailing interest “in promoting workplace efficiency and avoiding workplace disruption” (i.e., the balancing test established in
Pickering v. Bd. of Educ.,
*225
In undertaking the requisite analysis, the District Court relied on
Baldassare v. New Jersey,
Next, the District Court pointed to record evidence suggesting that Flipping sought to prevent Reilly’s promotion because of his role in the Munoz case and drew an inference from the facts in the record, including Snellbaker’s knowledge of the Munoz case and his dissatisfaction with Flower’s recommendation, that Snell-baker conspired with Flipping to retaliate against Reilly for the same reason.
Id.
at 516. Therefore, the Court concluded that Reilly had established a prima facie case of retaliation. The-Court further stated that there were material issues of disputed fact about “(a) whether Reilly’s increased punishment was substantially motivated by his participation in the Munoz case and (b) whether his increased punishment would have occurred in the absence of his participation.” Id
.
(citing
Baldassare,
Having concluded that there was sufficient evidence of a violation of a constitutional right, the Court analyzed whether that right was clearly established. The Court held that Reilly’s right to be free from retaliation for speech protected by the First Amendment was clearly established because the situation in Baldassare was factually similar to that presented in Reilly’s case and Baldassare had been decided prior to the retaliatory actions alleged here; thus the Court reasoned that “a reasonable official in Flipping’s or Snell-baker’s position in 2003 would have understood that increasing Reilly’s punishment in retaliation for his participation in the Munoz investigation and trial violated Reilly’s First Amendment rights.” Id.
Approximately two months after the District Court entered the order on appeal here, the Supreme Court issued its decision in
Garcetti v. Ceballos,
In its opinion, the Supreme Court distinguished between employee speech and citizen speech. The Court recognized that “the First Amendment protects a public employee’s right, in certain circumstances, to speak as a citizen addressing matters of public concern.”
Id.
at 417,
Applying these principles to the ease before it, the Court stated that the “controlling factor” was that Ceballos prepared the memo “pursuant to his duties as a calendar deputy.”
Id.
at 421,
Flipping and Snellbaker argue that under
Garcetti
they are entitled to quali
*227
fied immunity on Reilly’s First Amendment claim as a matter of law because Reilly’s speech in the Munoz case was made pursuant to his official duties, and thus that speech was not protected by the First Amendment. In
Garcetti,
the Supreme Court described the inquiry into whether the plaintiff spoke pursuant to his official duties as “a practical one,” noting that “[f]ormal job descriptions often bear little resemblance to the duties an employee actually is expected to perform, and the listing of a given task in an employee’s written job description is neither necessary nor sufficient to demonstrate that conducting the task is within the scope of the employee’s professional duties for First Amendment purposes.”
Id.
at 424-25,
Consistent with
Garcetti,
we thereafter held that “whether a particular incident of speech is made within a particular plaintiffs job duties is a mixed question of fact and law.”
Foraker v. Chaffinch,
In the case before us, there was no argument, let alone fact finding, by the District Court as to whether Reilly’s speech was made pursuant to his official duties. Although Flipping argues that Reilly has conceded that he was acting pursuant to his official duties,
4
Reilly disputes this characterization, particularly with respect to his trial testimony. Therefore, Reilly argues that the question whether he engaged in speech pursuant to his official duties presents a factual issue that is not cognizable under the collateral order doctrine. We agree that some aspects of Reilly’s speech in the context of the Munoz investigation require further
*228
factual development by the District Court. On the other hand, the fact of Reilly’s sworn testimony at the Munoz trial is sufficiently developed on this appeal for us to consider as a matter of law whether that speech was made “pursuant to [his] official duties,”
Garcetti,
In analyzing Reilly’s retaliation claim, the District Court asked whether Reilly’s speech involved a matter of public concern and whether the
Pickering
balancing weighed in favor of Reilly. See
Reilly,
[a] public employee’s statement is protected activity when (1) in making it, the employee spoke as a citizen, (2) the statement involved a matter of public concern, and (3) the government employer did not have “an adequate justification for treating the employee differently from any other member of the general public” as a result of the statement he made [i.e., the Pickering balancing test].
Hill v. Borough of Kutztown,
It is axiomatic that “[e]very citizen ... owes to his society the duty of giving testimony to aid in the enforcement of the law.”
Piemonte v. United States,
The Supreme Court has relied on this principle in rejecting attempts by citizens, regardless of their role in our society, to circumvent their obligation to comply with judicial process. For instance, in
Branzburg v. Hayes,
we perceive no basis for holding that the public interest in law enforcement and in ensuring effective grand jury proceedings is insufficient to override the consequential, but uncertain, burden on news gathering that is said to result from insisting that reporters, like other citizens, respond to relevant questions put to them in the course of a valid grand jury investigation or criminal trial.
Id.
at 690-91,
The need to develop all relevant facts in the adversary system is both fundamental and comprehensive.... The very integrity of the judicial system and public confidence in the system depend on full disclosure of all the facts, within the framework of the rules of evidence. To ensure that justice is done, it is imperative to the function of courts that compulsory process be available for the production of evidence needed either by the prosecution or by the defense.
Id.
at 709,
We have acknowledged the importance of this same principle when evaluating First Amendment retaliation claims. In
Pro v. Donatucci,
we considered whether Pro, an employee in the office of the Clerk of the Orphans’ Court, could state a claim against Donatucci, the Register of Wills of Philadelphia County, on the basis that Pro’s employment was terminated shortly after she appeared in court pursuant to a subpoena to testify for Donatucci’s wife in a divorce action against Donatucci.
We found persuasive the reasoning of our sister court that “it is the duty of every person to testify truthfully before a duly constituted tribunal” and that “these values, along with the first amendment values, would not be served if the fear of retaliation and reprisal effectively muzzled witnesses testifying in open court.”
Id.
(quoting
Reeves v. Claiborne County Bd. of Educ.,
A year later, we answered the question reserved in
Pro. See Green v. Philadelphia Housing Auth.,
Many courts of appeals have joined this court and the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit in recognizing the fundamental role in-court testimony plays in our society and its importance to the question whether a public employee’s speech is protected by the First Amendment.
See, e.g., Herts v. Smith,
Despite the overwhelming weight of authority concluding that an employee’s truthful testimony in court is protected by the First Amendment, we are aware of no precedential appellate decision after
Gar-ceta
answering the question whether truthful trial testimony arising out of the employee’s official responsibilities constitutes protected speech.
5
Only one federal appellate court has issued a precedential opinion even touching upon this issue. Specifically, the Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit concluded that a police officer’s subpoenaed civil deposition testimony “was unquestionably not ... part of what he was employed to do,” and thus it was protected even though the officer testified about speech that was made pursuant to his official duties.
Morales v. Jones,
Here, however, Reilly, as an Atlantic City police officer, assisted a state investigation of a fellow officer and testified for the prosecution at the subsequent trial. Thus, the speech at issue on this appeal, Reilly’s trial testimony, appears to have stemmed from his official duties in the investigation. The
Garcetti
opinion focused solely on the speech contained in Ceballos’ internal memo, leaving to the court of appeals on remand the opportunity to consider whether Ceballos’ conduct at the meeting and his testimony in court were entitled to First Amendment protection.
Because
Garcetti
offers no express instruction on the application of the First Amendment to the trial testimony of a public employee, we turn to the settled principles discussed above: “[t]he duty to testify has long been recognized as a basic obligation that
every citizen
owes his Government.”
Calandra,
When a government employee testifies truthfully, s/he is not “simply performing his or her job duties,”
Garcetti,
Having concluded that Reilly’s truthful testimony in court constituted citizen speech and that his claim is not foreclosed by the “official duties” doctrine enunciated in Garcetti, 6 we briefly address Appellants’ *232 three remaining challenges to the District Court’s order denying them qualified immunity on Reilly’s First Amendment retaliation claim.
First, Appellants argue that even if Reilly’s speech may be protected by the First Amendment, that fact was not clearly established until the Supreme Court’s decision in
Garcetti,
and therefore they are entitled to qualified immunity as a matter of law. This contention is without merit. The protected status of courtroom testimony was clearly established even at the time we decided Pro.
7
Second, Snellbaker argues that Reilly is not entitled to First Amendment protection for his speech in the Munoz matter because his right to speak was outweighed by the police department’s interest in disciplining Reilly for creating a hostile work environment. Because the
Pickering
balancing analysis presents a question of law,
see Baldassare,
Reilly does not dispute that he was subject to discipline for the findings in the Flower report; rather, he argues that Flipping and Snellbaker used that occasion to punish him more severely than warranted (i.e., by increasing the recommended four-day suspension to a ninety-day suspension and demotion) in retaliation for his speech in the Munoz matter, including his testimony at trial. Where a plaintiff claims that the stated grounds for his/her discipline were a pretext for the discipline imposed, the court does not apply the
Pickering
balancing test solely to the speech that defendants claim motivated the disciplinary action, see
Versarge v. Twp. of Clinton,
To the extent that Snellbaker attempts to argue that his disciplinary recommendation was justified by Reilly’s violations and was in no way connected to Reilly’s speech in the Munoz matter, his argument is more
*233
properly viewed as a challenge to the factual issues of motivation and rebuttal.
See Monteiro v. City of Elizabeth,
Moreover, Snellbaker provides no compelling support for his argument that the law was not clearly established in this area. The
Pickering
balancing test was clearly established at the time of the alleged retaliation, as was the notion of pre-textual discipline in the context of a First Amendment retaliation claim.
See, e.g., Latessa v. N.J. Racing Comm’n,
Third, Snellbaker argues that the District Court erred in leaving for the jury the question whether there was a causal connection between Reilly’s speech in the Munoz matter and any alleged adverse employment action by Snellbaker. He argues that this is a legal issue and that the length of time between Reilly’s speech in the Munoz matter and the allegedly retaliatory actions forecloses the possibility of a First Amendment violation here. But the precedents upon which Snellbaker relies focus on whether timing alone is sufficient to draw an inference of retaliation.
See, e.g., Estate of Smith v. Marasco,
In summary, we conclude that the District Court appropriately denied Appellants’ motions for summary judgment on the basis of qualified immunity with respect to Reilly’s First Amendment retaliation claim.
VI.
Flipping and Snellbaker also challenge the District Court’s order denying them qualified immunity on Reilly’s procedural due process claim. The District Court framed the issue presented by that claim as “whether Reilly was afforded an appropriate level of pre-deprivation procedural due process before the decision to increase his punishment from a 4-day suspension to a 90-day suspension, a reduction in rank, and removal from the promotion list.”
Reilly,
The District Court considered two separate theories of liability: (1) that Flipping relied on Reilly’s disciplinary history without giving Reilly notice and an opportunity to rebut that evidence; and (2) that the final disciplinary decision in Reilly’s case was made by an individual without authority to make that decision. See id. at 518— 20. The District Court concluded that *234 Flipping and Snellbaker were entitled to qualified immunity on the first theory of liability because at the time of Flipping’s letters this court had not decided that a government employee was entitled to the opportunity to respond to a punishment decision, a determination we made in 2005. Id. at 520-21. That issue is not before us on this appeal. Instead, we limit our discussion to the process accorded by New Jersey’s regulatory scheme.
Under the procedure for “major discipline” of civil servants set forth in the New Jersey Administrative Code, see N.J. Admin. Code §§ 4A:2-2.1 to .12, “[a]n employee must be served with a Preliminary Notice of Disciplinary Action setting forth the charges and statement of facts supporting the charges (specifications), and afforded the opportunity for a hearing pri- or to imposition of major discipline,” id. § 4A:2-2.5(a). Such a hearing “shall be held before the appointing authority or its designated representative.” Id. § 4A:2-2.6(a). “Within 20 days of the hearing, or such additional time as agreed to by the parties, the appointing authority shall make a decision on the charges and furnish the employee either by personal service or certified mail with a Final Notice of Disciplinary Action.” Id. § 4A:2-2.6(d). The employee may then appeal the Final Notice of Disciplinary Action to the Merit System Board, id. § 4A:2-2.8, and may request a hearing from that body, id. § 4A:2-2.9.
Instead of reviewing the post-deprivation process that would have been available to Reilly had he appealed the disciplinary decision in his case, the District Court focused on “who ha[d] authority to make the final disciplinary decision, and who actually made the decision in Reilly’s case.”
Reilly,
questions of fact exist as to whether the person with legal authority to make the final discipline decision was actually the person to make the decision in Reilly’s case. If Reilly is able to prove at trial that someone other than the person vested with authority to make final discipline decisions made the decision as to his discipline, he will have proven a procedural due process violation.
Id.
at 520 (citing
Sarteschi v. Burlein,
“A decision on qualified immunity ... ‘will be premature when there are unresolved disputes of historical fact relevant to the immunity analysis.’ ”
Wright v. City of Philadelphia,
In
Alvin v. Suzuki,
We also rejected Alvin’s argument that his use of formal procedures would have been futile. We acknowledged that “[wjhen access to procedure is absolutely blocked or there is evidence that the procedures are a sham, the plaintiff need not pursue them to state a due process claim.”
Id.
at 118. Applying that standard to the facts presented, we stated, “since Alvin never invoked the second part of the processes available to him, which appear facially adequate, we will not hold that this step would have been unavailing (in procedure, if not in substance), absent concrete evidence supporting such a contention.”
Id.
We concluded that Alvin could not “forego attempting to use [the bypassed] processes simply because he thinks that they will be followed in a biased manner.”
Id.
at 119. We further explained that an allegation of biased pre-deprivation procedures is insufficient to prove futility in “the presence of ... apparently adequate post-termination remedies.... ”
Id.
(citing
McDaniels v. Flick,
McDaniels
is equally instructive. McDaniels was a tenured professor at Delaware County Community College.
McDaniels,
a discharged employee cannot claim in federal court that he has been denied due process because his pretermination hearing was held by a biased individual where he has not taken advantage of his right to a post-deprivation hearing before an impartial tribunal that can rectify any possible wrong committed by the initial decisionmaker.
Id. at 460.
Here, the disputed issue of fact identified by the District Court, “whether the person with legal authority to make the final discipline decision was actually the person to make that decision in Reilly’s case,”
Reilly,
Reilly does not allege, nor has he produced evidence, that the Merit System Board was biased against him, unavailable, or patently inadequate. He completely ignores the existence of statutory post-deprivation procedures that serve as a counterbalance to any discipline imposed on New Jersey civil servants, such as that allegedly imposed by Flipping and Snellbaker. Reilly does not provide any authority for the proposition that a civil servant may state a valid due process claim where s/he has resigned before taking advantage of any post-deprivation procedures available. Nor do
Sarteschi
or
Gilbert v. Homar,
Although
Sarteschi
asserts the uncontroversial proposition that a procedural due process right arises to protect one’s expectation of proper procedures before discharge, that decision says nothing about a plaintiffs obligations to follow post-deprivation procedures before filing suit for an alleged violation of his/her right to pre-deprivation procedures.
Gilbert
is equally unavailing. In that decision, the Supreme Court explained that pre-deprivation process is not invariably required.
Rather than supporting the proposition that a pre-deprivation procedure may be challenged without consideration of any available post-deprivation procedures, Gilbert makes clear that the availability and validity of any pre-deprivation process must be analyzed with reference to the context of the alleged violation and the adequacy of available post-deprivation procedures. Reilly did not attempt to invoke any of the post-deprivation procedures available to him, nor does he contest their adequacy. Therefore, he cannot state a valid procedural due process claim as a matter of law.
In summary, we will reverse the District Court’s order that Appellants are not entitled to qualified immunity at the summary judgment stage with respect to Reilly’s Fourteenth Amendment procedural due process claim. 8 Because Reilly cannot state a claim under the Fourteenth Amendment, defendants are entitled to qualified immunity.
VII.
Finally, Appellants ask us to reverse the District Court’s decision denying
*237
them summary judgment on Reilly’s CEPA claim and his claim for punitive damages. The courts of appeals may exercise pendent appellate jurisdiction “over issues that are not independently appeal-able but that are intertwined with issues over which the appellate court properly and independently exercises its jurisdiction.”
E.I. DuPont de Nemours & Co. v. Rhone Poulenc Fiber & Resin Intermediates, S.A.S.,
Snellbaker argues that Reilly’s CEPA claim is intertwined with his First Amendment claim because the District Court denied summary judgment on the CEPA claim for the same reasons that it denied summary judgment on the First Amendment claim. 9 We have concluded that the District Court properly denied Appellants summary judgment on Reilly’s First Amendment claim. See supra Part V. Therefore, to the extent that Reilly’s CEPA claim may be intertwined with his First Amendment claim, we would affirm the District Court’s denial of summary judgment. 10
Flipping argues that Reilly’s punitive damages claim is intertwined with his First and Fourteenth Amendment claims because if the court finds that Appellants are entitled to qualified immunity on those claims, there would be no outrageous conduct on which to base punitive damages under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. However, because we have concluded that the District Court’s denial of summary judgment on the First Amendment claim should be affirmed, Flipping’s argument would fail even if we exercised pendent appellate jurisdiction over the punitive damages issue.
In summary, we decline to exercise pendent appellate jurisdiction over the remaining arguments raised by Flipping and Snellbaker on this appeal.
yin.
For the reasons set forth, we will affirm the District Court’s denial of summary judgment with respect to the First Amendment retaliation claim and reverse the denial of summary judgment with respect to the Fourteenth Amendment due process claim.
Notes
. Reilly was involved in an investigation of allegations of drug dealing and the theft of utility services at a funeral home owned by Flipping's father, and allegedly investigated Flipping for failing to report to work and altering his time cards. There is no evidence that Flipping was aware of these particular investigations or Reilly's role in any such investigations.
. Of course, one of the "previous administrations” referred to in Flipping’s letter was DiNoto's, with whom Flipping and Snellbaker shared an openly antagonistic relationship.
See generally McCullough,
. McCullough was a co-plaintiff with Flipping and Snellbaker in their 1998 lawsuit against DiNoto.
See generally McCullough,
. Flipping’s argument is premised on a single exchange from Reilly’s deposition during the District Court proceedings:
[Q.] Did you tell Flipping, in that conversation in the Detective Bureau, I did what I did because it was my job, I was ordered to do it, I’m doing my job — I did my job? A. That was the — you know, that was the context of the conversation.
Q. That is a fair summation of what thought you transmitted to Mr. Flipping, correct?
A. Yeah.
And what I received back from him was— the only thing he was concerned about was it wasn't our job to do it, you shouldn't have been involved, you know.
Flipping App. at 133. Because the page immediately preceding the passage reproduced here has not been included in the appendix, it is not entirely clear which aspects of Reilly’s speech he agreed were part of his job. Moreover, this passage suggests that Flipping disagreed with Reilly as to whether Reilly’s actions were in fact part of his official responsibilities. Finally, Reilly was speaking as to what he told Flipping, rather than what he believed.
. The Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit recently held that a plaintiff's testimony at a legislative hearing was not protected because it "was given as an employee and not as a citizen....” Tamayo v. Blagojevich, 526 F.3d 1074, 1092 (7th Cir.2008). That issue is distinct from the one before us on appeal.
. As discussed in
Pro,
"[w]e have not held that courtroom testimony should receive ‘absolute’ First Amendment protection.”
. In fact, when Flipping and Snellbaker sued DiNoto in 1998, the district court relied on
Pro
and
Green
for the proposition that "the testimonies” they provided in the Munoz trial and other "judicial proceeding[s] are automatically of a public concern because, as in
Green,
they implicate the judicial and public interest in the integrity of the truth seeking process and the effective administration of justice.”
McCullough,
. In light of our holding that Flipping and Snellbaker are entitled to summary judgment on the procedural due process claim, we need not discuss Appellants' remaining arguments for reversal of the District Court's decision on this count.
. Flipping made a similar argument regarding the CEPA claim in his principal appellate brief, but withdrew that argument in his reply brief.
. We do not decide that the CEPA claim is sufficiently intertwined with the First Amendment claim to exercise pendent appellate jurisdiction over the former. We only decide that our affirmance of the latter would require affirmance of the former if those claims were in fact sufficiently intertwined to invoke our jurisdiction.
