Robert Charles REULAND, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
Charles J. HYNES, individually and in his capacity as District Attorney for the County of Kings, New York, Defendant-Appellant.
Docket No. 04-5521-cv.
United States Court of Appeals, Second Circuit.
Argued: October 25, 2005.
Decided: August 21, 2006.
Elizabeth I. Freedman, Assistant Corporation Counsel (Michael A. Cardozo, Corporation Counsel of the City of New York, on the brief) New York, NY, for Defendant-Appellant.
Jane Bilus Gould, Lovett & Gould, LLP, (Brita Nicaj, on the brief) White Plains, NY, for Plaintiff-Appellee.
Before WINTER, POOLER, and SOTOMAYOR, Circuit Judges.
POOLER, Circuit Judge.
On August 21, 2001, appellee Robert Charles Reuland filed suit against appellant Charles J. Hynes under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claiming that his demotion within and later firing from the Brooklyn District Attorney's Office was in unlawful retaliation for his exercise of his rights under the First Amendment. Following a trial, the jury returned a special verdict finding that: (1) Reuland had not shown that one of his motives was to address a matter of public concern; (2) Reuland had shown that his statement to New York magazine was a substantial or motivating factor in Hynes's decision to demote him; (3) Hynes had not shown that he would have demoted Reuland in any event because Hynes believed Reuland lied to him; and (4) Reuland had not shown that his speech was a substantial or motivating factor in his termination.
Both Reuland and Hynes brought motions pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 50(b) seeking entry of judgment in their favor based on the jury's findings of fact. Judge Gleeson ruled that the speaker's motive is not dispositive in determining whether speech is a matter of public concern and that Reuland's statement to New York magazine regarding the crime rate in Brooklyn is a matter of public concern. He also found that in light of the jury's findings regarding Hynes's motivation in demoting Reuland, Hynes cannot show this action was based on the potential for disruption rather than retaliation or avoid liability based on qualified immunity. He therefore issued an order directing that judgment be entered in favor of the plaintiff.
We agree with the district court and hold that the speaker's motive is not dispositive in determining whether speech is on a matter of public concern and that Reuland's statement is a matter of public concern. We also hold that Hynes has waived the issue of disruption by agreeing not to include it in the jury charge. Finally, we hоld that Hynes cannot benefit from qualified immunity because it would not have been objectively reasonable for him to believe the speech was unprotected and the jury found that he acted with improper retaliatory motive.
BACKGROUND
Reuland began working for the Brooklyn District Attorney's office in January 1997. He initially worked in the Grand Jury Bureau, and, after about three weeks, was promoted to the Red Zone, a general trial division. After about a year-and-a-half, he was promoted to Senior Assistant District Attorney.
In May 2000, Reuland signed a contract with Random House for the publication of two books, one of which was Hollowpoint, a fictionalized account of a Brooklyn District Attorney that Reuland had already essentially completed. Around the same time, Reuland sought promotion to the Homicide Bureau. He met with the District Attorney, Charles Hynes, to discuss this possibility on May 31, 2000. They discussed Reuland's book, which Reuland assured Hynes contained no negative information about the office. Shortly after this conversation, on June 5, 2000, Reuland was promoted to the Homicide Bureau.
Hollowpoint was published on March 27, 2001. A couple of months before, in early 2001, Reuland was interviewed in his Homicide Bureau office by a reporter for New York magazine for an article about young lawyers in New York. The article was published in the February 26, 2001, issue of the magazine, which became available prior to that date, and discussed Reuland's upcoming book. The article also quoted Reuland as saying, "Brooklyn is the best place to be a homicide prosecutor" because "[w]e've got more dead bodies per square inch than anyplace else." Cameron Stracher, Raising the Bar, N.Y. Mag., Feb. 26, 2001, at 31.
On February 22, 2001, after the article was published, Reuland met with First Assistant District Attorney Amy Feinstein, who told him that prominent politicians were outraged over his description of Brooklyn in the article.1 Reuland explained that he did not mean the statement to be literally true and was merely trying to explain why he enjoyed his job. He offered to write a lettеr to the editor explaining his remark. Feinstein and Assistant District Attorney Barry Schreiber edited Reuland's draft letter, and Hynes approved it. The letter explained that while the quote was correct:
[T]his was not intended to be, nor is it, literally true. In fact Brooklyn's murder rate has declined more than 66 percent during the past decade. Even with the remarkable reduction, the loss of life remains high and still keeps a homicide prosecutor busy—the point of my hyperbolic remark.
The letter was published in the April 2, 2001, issue. Letters, N.Y. Mag., Apr. 2, 2001, at 8.
On March 9, 2001, Reuland met with Hynes, who told him that his remarks were hurtful because, as District Attorney, Hynes had actually reduced the crime rate. Reuland says he explained that from his perspective, working directly with crime victims, there was still a great deal of work to be done and that he loved working as a prosecutor in Brooklyn in part because he felt he could make a difference. Hynes was not satisfied with this explanation and accused Reuland of lying to him and seeking the promotion to the Homicide Bureau simply to sell books. Hynes told Reuland he could either accept transfer to the Orange Zone, which would constitute a demotion back to a trial bureau, or quit. Ultimately, Reuland accepted the demotion.
Reuland did not receive positive reviews of his performance while in the Orange Zone. On July 16, 2001, Reuland wrote to Feinstein to request transfer back to the Homicide Bureau. Feinstein denied this request, and, the next day, told Reuland she expected his resignation by the end of the day. Reuland sent her his resignation.
After his termination, Reuland filed suit against Hynes in the Eastern District of New York claiming adverse employment actions in retaliation for his exercise of his First Amendment right to freedom of speech. Hynes moved for judgment on the pleadings pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(c) and on the basis of qualified immunity, which the district court denied. See Reuland v. Hynes, No. 01-cv-5661 (E.D.N.Y. April 12, 2002). Hynes appealed to this Court, and we affirmed by summary order, finding issues of fact and law that precluded resolution in Hynes's favor. See Reuland v. Hynes,
A jury trial was held, at which Hynes testified that he met with Reuland after the New York magazine statement was published because he wanted to know why Reuland would say something that was not supported by statistics. Hynes also testified that he decided to demote Reuland during this meeting because he believed Reuland had lied to him about his reasons for seeking a transfer to the Homicide Bureau. Hynes did not express any concern that, because Reuland's statement to New York magazine had been untrue, Reuland's credibility would be destroyed and he would no longer be able to function effectively as a prosecutor, as Hynes now contends.
After the conclusion of testimony, Judge Gleeson held a conference with the parties to go over the verdict form and jury charge. At this conference, defense counsel suggested the jury be asked if Hynes reasonably bеlieved Reuland's false statement to New York magazine would interfere with their working relationship, a fact that could then be weighed by the court in determining the Pickering balance. See Pickering v. Bd. of Ed.,
The jury found that Reuland's statement in New York magazine was a motivating factor in Hynes's decision to demote him, and that, absent this motivation, Reuland would not have been demoted anyway, because Hynes believed Reuland had lied to him. However, they found that the statement was not a motivating factor in Reuland's termination. The jury also found that, in making the statement, Reuland was not motivated by a desire to address a matter of public concern. On the issue of damages, the jury awarded $30,000 for Reuland's demotion and declined to award punitive damages.
Both Reuland and Hynes sought entry of judgment in their favor based on the jury's findings of fact. Judge Gleeson held that the jury's finding regarding Reuland's motive was not dispositive in determining whether that speech addressed a matter of public concern and concluded that the crime rate in Brooklyn is inherently a matter of public concern. See Reuland v. Hynes, 01-cv-5661,
Hynes contends on appeal that (1) the jury's finding regarding Reuland's motive conclusively establishes that the statement was not on a matter of public concern; (2) regardless, the statement is not on a matter of public concern; (3) Reuland's speech interest is outweighed by the District Attorney's reasonable concern about disruption; and (4) Hynes is entitled to qualified immunity. At oral argumеnt and in a post-argument 28(j) letter to the court, Hynes further argues that Reuland's speech was not entitled to any constitutional protection because it was false.
DISCUSSION
I. Protection of Hyperbolic Speech under the First Amendment
We note, as an initial matter, that the fact that Reuland's statement was not literally true does not automatically deprive it of First Amendment protection.2 False speech, as well as hyperbole, is still entitled to First Amendment protection, as long as it is not made with knowledge or reckless disregard of its falsity. See N.Y. Times Co. v. Sullivan,
The same First Amendment protection for false speech applies even in the context of public employee speech, where the government has somewhat greater latitude. Pickering,
Because Reuland's statement was, as all parties concede, hyperbole, to demonstrate that it is not entitled to First Amendment protection Hynes would have to show that the statement (1) would reasonably have been perceived as an assertion of fact, (2) was false, and (3) was made with knowledge or reckless disregard of its falsity.3 Hustler,
II. First Amendment Retaliation Law
"For over 30 years the Supreme Court has consistently held that while the government enjoys significantly greater latitude when it acts in its capacity as employer than when it acts as sovereign, the First Amendment nonetheless prohibits it from punishing its employees in retaliation for the content of their protected speech." Locurto v. Safir,
A third aspect of the retaliation inquiry deals with causation. Initially, to make out a prima facie case, the employee must show that the speech was a substantial or motivating factor in the adverse action. Sheppard,
III. Public concern
We first address whether Reuland's statement to New York magazine constituted a matter of public concern.7 Hynes contends that because the jury found Reuland was not motivated by a desire to address a matter of public concern, his speech cannot have been a matter of public concern. We disagree. We hold that the speaker's motive, while one factor that may be considered, is not dispositive as to whether his speech addressed a matter of public concern.
Whether Reuland's speech is a matter of public concern is important because "when a public employee speaks not as a citizen upon matters of public concern, but instead as an employee upon matters only of personal interest, absent the most unusual circumstances, a federal court is not the appropriate forum in which to review the wisdom of a personnel decision. . . ." Connick v. Myers,
The facts of the Supreme Court's decision in Connick indicate that motive is not dispositive as to whether an employee's speech is a matter of public concern. That case involved an assistant district attorney who had circulated a questionnaire in the office. Id. at 140-41,
Similarly, in United States v. National Treasury Employees Union [hereinafter NTEU], the Supreme Court found the speech at issue to be a matter of public conсern because "the content of the respondents' messages had nothing to do with their jobs and does not even arguably have any adverse impact on the efficiency of the office in which they work. They do not address audiences composed of co-workers or supervisors; instead, they write or speak for segments of the general public."
Our previous cases suggesting that the speaker's motive might indicate that the speech is not on a matter of public concern have focused primarily on private motives related to employment grievances. See, e.g., Ezekwo v. NYC Health & Hosps. Corp.,
In Lewis v. Cowen, we noted that, in determining whether an employee's speech addresses a matter of public concern, "the court should focus on the motive of the speaker and attempt to determine whether the speech was calculated to redress personal grievances or whether it had a broader public purpose."
Other circuits that have considered the role of motive on the question of public concern have almost uniformly agreed with our reading of Connick and found that motive is not dispositive. See Tripp v. Cole,
We join the majority of circuits in finding that the speaker's motive is not dispositive as to whether an employee's speech relates to a matter of public concern. Therefore, the jury's finding that Reuland was not motivated by a desire to address a matter of public concern does not resolve the issue. Under Connick, we must consider the "content, form, and context of a given statement, as revealed by the whole record." Johnson,
Reuland's statement addressed the crime rate in Brooklyn. We have previously held that crime rates are inherently a matter of public concern. See Morris v. Lindau,
IV. Pickering Balancing
Hynes argues on appeal that he demoted Reuland because Reuland's hyperbolic statement made him untrustworthy, a quality that would undermine his effectiveness as a prosecutor. Hynes further contends that this disruption of the effectiveness of the district attorney's office outweighed Reuland's interest in the speech under the Pickering balance. Although this argument is not without merit, we hold that Hynes has waived the issue of the disruption by аgreeing not to submit the underlying facts of his disruption claim to the jury.
Hynes presented few arguments regarding the Pickering balance throughout the proceedings below. Initially, in his motion for judgment on the pleadings, Hynes argued that the Pickering balance tipped sharply in his favor. However, on appeal from the denial of that motion to this court, Hynes argued only that the speech at issue did not pertain to a matter of public concern. Furthermore, in his motion for summary judgment, Hynes made no argument regarding the Pickering balance.
More importantly, Hynes explicitly waived the issue of the Pickering balance at the jury charge conference by agreeing that the jury need not decide whether the adverse employment actions were motivated by the potential for disruption, rather than retaliation. At that conference, Hynes's counsel suggested that the jury be asked: "did the Defendant Hynes reasonably believe that the plaintiffs false statement to the New York Magazine did or would likely interfere with the good working relationship between the plaintiff and the defendant." She suggested that this was part of the Pickering balancing test. Alternаtively, the district court proposed to ask the jury whether Hynes demoted Reuland because he believed Reuland lied to him. Hynes's counsel attempted to broaden this to simply "he had lied period," but the court responded: "That is not what the evidence is. . . . The whole issue whether he lied to him. This really isn't . . . a Pickering question, it's a causation question. It is a way of focusing more precisely on your version of what caused the demotion." Rather than persist in her Pickering argument, Hynes's counsel replied, "I think that is right. I think what Your Honor has proposed will work." Generally, we need not consider a claim on appeal where the party advancing it consented not to submit it to the jury below. See Coffey v. Dobbs Int'l Servs., Inc.,
In addition, Hynes's failure to submit the Pickering balance to the jury has left factual questions unresolved that would make it impossible for us to decide this issue. The jury should have resolved whether Hynes was in fact motivated by a desire to avoid disruption, rather than retaliation, and whether his concern about disruption was reasonable. See Gorman-Bakos v. Cornell Coop. Extension,
V. Qualified Immunity
"Under the doctrine of qualified immunity, a government official performing discretionary functions is shielded from liability for civil damages if his conduct did not violate clearly established rights or if it would have been objectively reasonablе for the official to believe his conduct did not violate plaintiff's rights." Mandell v. County of Suffolk,
First, we address whether it was objectively reasonable for Hynes to believe Reuland's statement to New York magazine was not a matter of public concern, either because it was false or because Reuland's motive in making the statement was to sell books. In finding that hyperbolic speech is protected by the First Amendment, we rely on well-established precedent from the Supreme Court. See supra Part I; see also Hustler,
Our conclusion that the speaker's motive is not dispositive in determining whether speech addresses a matter of public concern rests primarily on Connick, another well-established Supreme Court precedent. See supra Part III; see also, Connick,
Next, we consider whether it would have been objectively reasonable for Hynes to believe that he could prevail on the Pickering balance. Becаuse even if the disruption outweighed the employee's speech interest, "the employee may still carry the day if he can show that the employer's motivation for the discipline was retaliation for the speech itself, rather than for any resulting disruption," Hynes would be entitled to qualified immunity on this basis only if a finder of fact determined that he had no retaliatory motive. Hynes has waived this issue by not submitting it to the jury. See supra Part IV. Therefore he cannot now claim qualified immunity on this basis.
Because it would not have been objectively reasonable for Hynes to believe he could demote Reuland in retaliation for his hyperbolic statement to New York magazine, and he did not request that the jury decide if he was motivated by disruption rather than retaliation, Hynes is not entitled to qualified immunity.
CONCLUSION
Accordingly, for the reasons set forth above, we affirm the district court's entry of judgment in favor of Reuland.
Judge WINTER dissents in a separate opinion.
Notes:
Notes
State Senator Marty Markowitz had contacted her to express his displeasure, and then Feinstein had told Hynes about it, who hаd asked her to speak to Reuland
At oral argument we requested the parties submit letter briefs on this issue and whether it was raised below. We have received these briefs and given them due consideration
Of course, the very definition of a hyperbolic statement is that it exaggerates the size or intensity of somethingSee Webster's Third New International Dictionary 1112 (1986).
The dissent makes much of Reuland's failure to provide any statistical basis for the statement, but, although the burden of proving falsity in this context has not yet been decided by our circuit, it is far from clear that it would be on ReulandSee Sullivan,
Under the Supreme Court's recent decision inGarcetti v. Ceballos, ___ U.S. ___, ___,
The district court in this case treated these two causation inquiries as the same. This would allow the employee to avoid thePickering balance and prevail only on causatiоn. Because we assume the Pickering balance cannot be obviated in this fashion, these questions must in fact be different. We need not resolve the precise contours of that difference here.
InLocurto v. Giuliani,
Although in its recent decision inSan Diego v. Roe,
WINTER, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
I respectfully dissent.
A prosecutor's statement to a magazine about homicide rates within his jurisdiction is not protected by the First Amendment when it was admittedly false, admittedly made without any belief of a basis in fact, and made to promote sales of the prosecutor's novel. Hustler Magazine v. Falwell,
I. The Facts
In the course of promoting a novel he had written, the plaintiff, Reuland, gave an interview to New York magazine. A reader of the resultant article would have learned that Reuland was a homicide prosecutor in Brooklyn. Reuland describеd Brooklyn as "the best place" to hold such a job because it had "more dead bodies per square inch than anyplace else." Even though the statement was indeed hyperbolic —no reasonable person would believe that homicide rates are compiled on a "dead bodies per square inch" basis—a reasonable reader would infer that Reuland as a prosecutor had personal knowledge of crime rates in Brooklyn and elsewhere and that Brooklyn had a higher homicide rate by meaningful statistical measures than other comparable places. It was so understood by a political leader and Reuland's boss, Hynes, who were upset because it was untrue. As a result, Reuland was demoted.
My colleagues assert that there is nothing in the record to show that Reuland's statement was false or that he knew it to be, or recklessly disregarded whether it was, false.1 The following is the state of the record. Reuland has never claimed that there was a factual basis for the statement "more . . . than anyplace else." When Reuland was challenged by Hynes to provide a statistical basis for the statement2 and when he testified on his own behalf at trial,3 Reuland would say only that the statement was "hyperbole" and that it was not intended to be true. Reuland's letter to the magazine conceded that the statement was intended to mean only that "the loss of life remains high," a clear admission that the "more . . . than anyplace else" claim was false.4 Hynes, on the other hand, testified at trial that Brooklyn did not have the highest homicide rate "by any statistics" of which he was aware.5
Finally, the jury found as a fact that Reuland's purpose in making the statement was not to speak on a matter of public concern, thereby adopting the defendants' view that Reuland was seeking only to promote sales of his book.
II. The Law
The legal question then is whether a public employee's statement, (i) that is about a subject specifically related to his employment responsibilities, (ii) thаt is false, (iii) for which the employee had no basis in fact, and (iv) that was made for reasons of personal profit, is protected by the First Amendment.
Reuland's sole claim in this regard is that his statement was protected because it was "hyperbole." I have no quarrel with the proposition that a protected statement does not lose protection simply because it is made in exaggerated form that will be understood by reasonable listeners as such. But it is also true that unprotected speech does not gain First Amendment protection by being stated in exaggerated form. Hyperbole is not a genre of speech unto itself; instead it is a rhetorical style used in protected or unprotected speech. Hyperbole is "[e]xtravagant exaggeration that represents something as much greater or less, better or worse, or more intense than it really is or depicts the impossible as actual." Webster's Third New International Dictionary 1112 (unabridged ed.1981). As the Supreme Court has noted, protected speech cannot be deprived of protection because it is clothed in "mere[ ] rhetorical hyperbole, a lusty and imaginative expression of the [underlying protected speech]." Letter Carriers v. Austin,
To be accorded First Amendment protection, Reuland's statements had to address a matter of public concern. Cobb v. Pozzi,
There is, therefore, no societal interest served by the judgment here. There is an interest in allowing public servants to speak as citizens on matters of public interest, Pickering v. Bd. of Ed.,
The judgment here not only furthers no legitimate societal interests but also may have very negative consequences. At the least, it has the potential of wrongly protecting some public servants who misinform the public about the performance of public agencies, impair the performance of those agencies, and thereby betray the public trust. The effect in the case of a prosecutor's office can be particularly harmful because a dedication to accuracy in public statements and a resistance to self-aggrandizing temptations is important to the professionalism of such an office.
Existing law clearly reflects these considerations.6 A knowing or recklessly false statement of fact is not protected by the First Amendment. See Gertz v. Robert Welch, Inc.,
there is no constitutional value in false statements of fact. Neither the intentional lie nor the careless error materially advances society's interest in `uninhibited, robust, and wide-open' debate on public issues. New York Times Co. v. Sullivan,
Id. (addressing the issue in the context of a defamation case). See also Nike, Inc. v. Kasky,
These propositions are underlined by the analysis in Pickering v. Board of Education,
Hustler Magazine v. Falwell,
I therefore dissent.
Notes:
My colleagues, after criticizing me for indulging in an "assumption" as to the state of thе record, go completely outside the record to find a single statistic that might support Reuland's statement. Although I believe such independent appellate research into adjudicative facts is not permissible, the need for self-defense leads me to answer. The extra-record evidence cited by my colleagues does not suggest that Reuland's statement about Brooklyn's homicide rates relative to the other boroughs and other American cities was remotely accurate. In absolute numbers, Brooklyn had 236 homicides in 2000, lower than Chicago, Illinois' 628; Los Angeles, California's 550; Detroit, Michigan's 396; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania's 319; Baltimore, Maryland's 261; and Washington, D.C.'s 239. NEW YORK DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES, 2000-2001 CRIME AND JUSTICE ANNUAL REPORT, Part One: Offenses Reported/Known to Police by County (2001),available at http://criminal-justice.state.ny.us/crimnet/ojsa/cja_00_01/sec1b.pdf; FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION, CRIME IN THE UNITED STATES— 2000, TABLE 8: OFFENSES KNOWN TO LAW ENFORCEMENT (2000), available at http://www.fbi.gov/ucr/cius_00/xl/00tbl08.xls. On a per capita basis, Brooklyn's homicide rate in 2000 was 9.57 per 100,000 people, lower than the Bronx (14.26); Gary, Indiana (65.21); Compton, California (57.76); New Orleans, Louisiana (48.28); Washington, D.C., (41.78); Detroit (41.63); Baltimore (40.08); Richmоnd, Virginia (36.40); St. Louis, Missouri (35.61); Birmingham, Alabama (32.53); Atlanta, Georgia (32.17); Kansas City, Missouri (25.59); Memphis, Tennessee (22.46); Chicago (21.68); Newark, New Jersey (21.20); Philadelphia (21.02); Milwaukee, Wisconsin (20.44); Dallas, Texas (19.43); Miami, Florida (18.21); Los Angeles (14.89); Cleveland, Ohio (14.84); New Haven, Connecticut (14.56); Bridgeport, Connecticut (13.62); Minneapolis, Minnesota (13.07); Tucson, Arizona (12.33); Indianapolis, Indiana (12.28); Syracuse, New York (12.22); Houston, Texas (11.77); Phoenix, Arizona (11.51); and Jacksonville, Florida (10.74). Calculated from FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION, CRIME IN THE UNITED STATES—2000 and NEW YORK DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES, 2000-2001 CRIME AND JUSTICE ANNUAL REPORT, supra, and population data from the U.S. Census Bureau, Population Finder, available at http://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/SAFFPopulation?_submenuId= population_0 & _sse=on. Applying Reuland's own "per square inch" formulation, it is no surprise that both the Bronx and Manhattan had higher homicide rates per square mile than Brooklyn, which had 2.44 homicides per square mile in 2000 relative to the Bronx's 3.33 homicides per square mile and Manhattan's 4.53. Calculated from NEW YORK DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES, 2000-2001 CRIME AND JUSTICE ANNUAL REPORT, and the land area of each place, Wikipedia, available at wikipedia.org. Brooklyn also had fewer homicides per square mile than Compton (5.29); Washington, D.C., (3.89); Baltimore (3.23); Detroit (2.85); and Chicago (2.76). Calculated from FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION, CRIME IN THE UNITED STATES—2000, supra, and land area from Wikipedia, supra.
Hynes's testimony was as follows:
Q What, if anything, did you do when yоu saw, read this article?
A I asked to see Mr. Reuland.
Q And why was that?
A I wanted to ask him about his quotation.
Q What did you want to ask him about his quotation?
A I wanted to know why he would say something that was not supported by any statistics that I was aware of.
Q Did you in fact have a meeting with Mr. Reuland?
A Yes.
Q When did that meeting occur?
A It's probably close in time to the publication of this magazine or when he read the magazine.
Q Do you have a recollection of when that meeting occurred?
A Specifically, no.
Q It was you who initiated the meeting?
A Yes.
Q Where did it occur?
A In my office at 350 Jay Street.
Q What did you say to him at that meeting and what did he say to you?
A I said did you tell New York Magazine, then I repeated the quote, and he said yes. And I said: How could you say something like that when it's not true?
Q What did he say?
A It's hyperbole. And I said no, it's not hyperbole, it's not true.
Q You had an understanding of what the word hyperbole means?
A I think so.
Q It means an exaggeration to make a point?
A I think that is correct.
Q Did he explain to context of his comment to you at that time?
A No, actually, he repeated hyperbole several times.
Q Did he tell you that was a quote taken in the context of a much longer and fuller interview?
A He sure did not.
Q Did he tell you that he was t[r]ying to tell the interviewer why he liked the job of being a prosecutor in the homicide bureau of your office?
A He most certainly did not.
Q He never said anything about that?
A That is correct.
Q Did he tell you that he did not intend for the comment to be literally true?
A He said it was hyperbole, so I guess that is the same thing.
Q So that's what you understood him to say?
A Yes.
* * *
A I wanted to find out—what he could tell me about this statement that was unsupportable by any statisticаl proof.
During the trial Reuland testified that he "knew that the concern was the remark was taken literally by Mr. Hynes and by the . . . prominent politicians and I offered to make clear that the remark was not intended for its literal truth." He also testified that "I was trying to say that not statistically, we have more dead bodies per square inch if you took out a ruler and measure the borough, I simply meant there was a lot of crime in Brooklyn" and that "I tried to explain to her that I did not mean the remark for its literal truth but rather I was trying to answer the question about why I liked to be a prosecutor." When his supervisor told him Hynes was offended by his remark because, according to Reuland's testimony, Hynes "took it for literal truth," Reuland stated that "I tried to convince her that was not my intention and I think I succeeded in it."
Rob Reuland, Letter to the Editor,Body Count, N.Y. MAG., April 2, 2001, at 8.
Hynes' testimony was as follows:
Q: What did you want to ask him about his quotation?
A: I wanted to know why he would say something that was not supported by any statistics I was aware of.
Even if Reuland had made his statement for reasons other than profit, it would still be unprotected by the First Amendment because it was knowingly or recklessly false. However, Reuland's financial interest in sales of his novel highlights the risk of protecting such false speech by public employees. The conflict of interest between Reuland as an author and the interests of the District Attorney's Office in preserving its reputation for reducing crime and for honesty is a serious one and a further reason for allowing that office to discipline an employee who behaves as Reuland did
Parody, unlike hyperbole, is "a literary style." Webster's Third New International Dictionary 1643 (unabridged ed.1981). A parody is chiefly a vehicle for ideas and involves speech that cannot "reasonably [be] interpreted as stating actual facts about the [subject of the parody]."Hustler,
It follows, of course, that, because I believe that no clearly established right of Reuland's was violated, Hynes would be entitleda fortiori to qualified immunity. Mandell v. County of Suffolk,
