Richard C. Lytle was employed as a police officer by the City of Haysville, Kansas from 1983 until 1991, when he was discharged after alleging that fellow Haysville officers committed second-degree murder by failing to render emergency aid to the victim of a police shooting. He brought suit against the City of Haysville and its police chief, James Earl Kitchings, contending that the defendants had attempted to cover up police officers’ misconduct and that he had been fired in retaliation for his allegations against them. The district court granted summary judgment for the defendants, and Mr. Lytle appeals. ■
*861 We exercise jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. Because the important factual issues in this case are in reality undisputed and because the district court’s decision involves questions of law under the appropriate balancing tests, we believe that this case is suited for summary judgment. For the reasons given below, we affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
Responding to a traffic disturbance on the evening of December 7,1990, Haysville police officer Luther Donald Meeks shot a Hays-ville resident, Datton Wilson, Jr., in self-defense. Within seconds of the shooting, Officer Meeks radioed the dispatcher to call emergency medical services. Lieutenant Bruce Powers and Officers Lanon Thompson and Tim Stock, all of the Haysville Police Department, appeared at the scene shortly thereafter.
Before the Emergency Medical Technicians (EMTs) arrived, the officers did not render emergency aid to Mr. Wilson. The officers had received instruction in cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) as part of their law enforcement training and had learned that they should not move or perform CPR on critically injured persons who are still breathing, as Mr. Wilson was. The EMTs arrived at the scene approximately six minutes after the shooting. They administered CPR and transported Mr. Wilson to the nearest hospital, where he was pronounced dead a short time later.
Approximately an hour after the shooting, Mr. Lytle arrived at the scene. By that time, the EMTs had already left with Mr. Wilson. According to his deposition testimony, Mr. Lytle asked Lieutenant Powers if the officers had performed CPR on Mr. Wilson before emergency medical personnel arrived. Mr. Lytle stated that Lieutenant Powers told him that the officers had not performed CPR because Mr. Wilson was, in Lieutenant Powers’s words, “dead or dying anyway.” Aplt’s App. vol. I at 209 (Tr. of dep. of Mr. Lytle, dated Apr. 26, 1994). However, in two written reports concerning the Wilson investigation, prepared on December 8 and December 9, 1990, Mr. Lytle did not mention the “dead or dying” comment. See id. vol. II at 598-601.
Several months after the shooting, Mr. Lytle had several telephone conversations with Mr. Jerry Berg, an attorney for Mr. Wilson’s widow. At that time, Mr. Lytle knew that Mr. Berg was demanding a grand jury investigation of the shooting and threatening to sue the City. On April 27,1991, Mr. Lytle gave a statement to Mr. Berg under oath. See Aplt’s App. vol. II at 620-93 (Tr. of April 27,1991 statement).
In his statement to Mr. Berg, Mr. Lytle explained that it was his wife who had first contacted Mr. Berg because the shooting had been troubling her husband. See id. at 624. Mr. Lytle then described his actions and observations on the evening of the shooting. He said that when he first arrived at the scene, Lieutenant Powers “just briefly told me what he wanted me to do, which was interview Mrs. Wilson.” Id. at 628. Mr. Lytle said that he asked Lieutenant Powers “if they had performed any type of CPR or anything on the victim and he stated, no, he was going to die anyway.” Id. at 629. Mr. Lytle said that he “was a little shocked because ... that’s the first thing that should have been done, somebody should have given [Mr. Wilson] CPR or at least applied direct pressure to the wound.” Id.
Within a week of the shooting, Mr. Lytle added, Officer Stock gave him the same explanation as to why the officers had not performed CPR when they first arrived at the scene: “Mr. Wilson was dying or dead anyway.” Id. at 638. Mr. Lytle agreed with Mr. Berg that the job descriptions for Hays-ville police officers required that “[i]f the victim is still alive, proper aid should be given.” Id. at 632. According to Mr. Lytle, the officers should have followed this policy by giving first aid to Mr. Wilson. When questioned by Mr. Berg, he stated that the officers’ failure to render aid constituted second degree murder. Id. at 648-49.
Mr. Lytle admitted to Mr. Berg that he was under orders not to discuss the Wilson case. Id. at 633. Additionally, he stated that it would have been appropriate for him to have talked to Chief Kitchings about his *862 fellow officers’ statements and that he should have done so. Id. at 642.
On May 15, 1991, Mr. Lytle testified before a grand jury of the Eighteenth Judicial District of Kansas. An attorney from the law firm representing the City of Haysville accompanied him, and Mr. Lytle gave him a transcript of the statement to Mr. Berg. Around this time, Mr. Lytle also spoke with a reporter for the Wichita Eagle newspaper. The newspaper ran articles that quoted Mr. Lytle as saying that Powers, Thompson, and Stock were to blame for Mr. Wilson’s death. The Haysville Pioneer, a local newspaper, also covered the Wilson controversy.
After reading about Mr. Lytle’s allegations in the newspaper and reviewing his statement to Mr. Berg, Chief Kitchings investigated Mr. Lytle’s allegations and determined that they were unsupported.' The parties do not dispute that, after the newspaper reports of Mr. Lytle’s allegations, morale in the Department decreased significantly. Fellow officers distrusted Mr. Lytle and refused to speak with him. Additionally, Mr. Lytle’s charges undermined public trust in the Department, making law enforcement more difficult. See Aplt’s App. vol. I at 90-123.
On July 16, 1991, Chief Kitchings terminated Mr. Lytle’s employment. The notice of termination cited Mr. Lytle’s breach of the Department’s confidentiality rules, but did not discuss the effect of Mr. Lytle’s statements on the functioning of the Department. See Aplt’s App. vol III at 964-66.
After his dismissal, Mr. Lytle brought this suit against the City and Chief Kitchings, alleging: (1) that his termination was in breach of an implied contract; (2) that he was discharged in retaliation for speech protected by the First Amendment (his statements to Mr. Berg and the press and his grand jury testimony); and (3) that his dismissal violated state law against retaliation for whistle-blowing. The defendants moved for summary judgment, and, during a status conference, the district court orally granted their motion on all of Mr. Lytle’s claims. As to the First Amendment claim, the district court granted summary judgment for both defendants on the merits and for Chief Kitchings on the additional and alternative ground of qualified immunity.
II. DISCUSSION
Mr. Lytle appeals the summary judgment granted against him on his First Amendment and state-law retaliatory discharge claims. He does not appeal the decision on his implied contract claim.
, A. Standard of Review
We review a decision granting summary judgment de novo, under the same legal standard applicable in the district court.
See Miles v. Denver Pub. Sch.,
Summary judgment is appropriate “if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c);
see also Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
*863 B. Issues on Appeal
1. First Amendment
Mr. Lytle first challenges the district court’s grant of summary judgment against him on his First Amendment claim. He maintains that the court’s ruling infringes on the constitutional rights of public employees who uncover wrongdoing in governmental agencies.
a. Pickering balancing
It is well-established that a government employer “cannot condition public employment on a basis that infringes the employee’s constitutionally protected interest in freedom of expression.”
Connick v. Myers,
First, we consider whether the speech in question addresses a matter of public concern. Matters of public concern are those of interest to the community, whether for social, political, or other reasons. See
Connick,
Second, if the speech does address a matter of public concern, the court must consider both employee’s interest in expression and the government employer’s interest in regulating the speech of its employees in order to maintain an efficient and effective workplace.
See Gardetto,
Third, if the speech is protected, the employee must show that the speech was a substantial or motivating factor for the challenged governmental action.
See Gardetto,
The Supreme Court has explained why a public employee’s speech is not given unqualified protection, but rather is balanced against the employer’s interest in efficient public service:
Government agencies are charged by law with doing particular tasks. Agencies hire employees to help do those tasks as effectively and efficiently as possible. When [an employee] ... begins to do or say things that detract from the agency’s effective operation, the government employer must have some power to restrain [him].
Waters v. Churchill,
Thus, “the government as employer ... has far broader powers [over speech] than does the government as sovereign.”
Id.
at 671,
In balancing the employee’s interest in expression against the government’s interest in efficiency, a court must consider “the manner, time, and place of the employ
*864
ee’s expression,” as well as the events leading up to it.
Rankin,
In the instant case, in conducting the required First Amendment inquiry, the district court began by identifying the particular speech at issue. Although Mr. Lytle’s complaint refers to three categories of allegedly protected speech' — his statements to Mr. Berg, his statements to the press, and his grand jury testimony — the district court considered only the first two categories. It reasoned that the defendants contended in their summary judgment motion that Mr. Lytle had not been terminated for his grand jury testimony and that Mr. Lytle did not dispute this contention in his objection to the defendants’ motion. See Aplt’s App. vol. Ill at 1093 (Tr. of Status Conference dated April 30, 1996) (“The way I read [the summary judgment briefs’ discussion of the grand jury testimony] was that plaintiff claimed the termination was for talking to the attorney or for talking to the media and not specifically for talking to the grand jury.”). The district court then concluded that Mr. Lytle’s statements to Mr. Berg and the press did “touch a matter of public concern.” Id. at 1106.
Next, the district court conducted the Pickering balancing. It found that Mr. Ly-tle’s interest in expression was outweighed by the City’s interest in efficient public service and that his speech was therefore not constitutionally protected. See Aplt’s App. vol. Ill, at 1106-07, 1113-19. As a result, the district court-did not consider the third and fourth parts of the First Amendment inquiry (whether Mr. Lytle’s speech was a substantial or motivating factor for Mr. Ly-tle’s discharge and whether the discharge would have occurred in the speech’s absence).
In this appeal, Mr. Lytle challenges the district court’s application of the Pickering test, arguing that the district court erred in concluding that the City’s interest in efficient public service outweighed his interests in free expression. 1 He focuses on his status as a whistle blower, contending that because he “was a sincere whistle blower who felt the police department had failed to investigate his complaint,” see Aplt’s Opening Br. at 17, his statements were protected under the First Amendment. ■ Significantly, Mr. Lytle does not challenge the district court’s finding that the grand jury testimony is not at issue in his First Amendment claim. 2
*865 Upon considering the factors relevant to the Pickering balancing we conclude for the reasons set forth below that the district court properly found that the City’s interests outweigh Mr. Lytle’s interest in speaking to Mr. Berg and the press about a confidential police investigation and that as a result, these statements are not protected by the First Amendment. Our application of the Pickering balancing renders it unnecessary for us to consider the third and fourth stages of the general First Amendment inquiry.
b. Pickering Applied to this Case
As the district court found and the parties acknowledge, Mr. Lytle’s statements to Mr. Berg and to the press involve matters of public concern.
See Conaway v. Smith,
We begin with Mr. Lytle’s interests, noting the significance of the fact that he has accused government officials of serious wrongdoing. “When balancing the rights of the employee against those of the employer, an employee’s First Amendment interest is entitled to greater weight where he is acting as a whistle blower in exposing government corruption.” Id. at 797.
Nevertheless, there are also several important aspects of Mr. Lytle’s speech that diminish his interests under the
Pickering
inquiry. In considering the time, place, and manner of the disputed speech, this circuit has considered whether the employee used “less disruptive internal channels, rather than going outside the city administration.”
Id.
at 798;
see also Johnsen v. Independent Sch. Dist. No. 3
Here, according to Mr. Lytle’s own account, Lieutenant Coleman was the only person within the Haysville Police Department
*866
whom he had informed of the “dead or dying” comments before he spoke to Mr. Berg about the Wilson case. Although he had submitted two written reports regarding his investigation of the Wilson shooting, these reports had a significant omission: Mr. Lytle failed to included any statements about the “dead or dying” comments. Further, Mr. Lytle made no other written record of them before he spoke to Mr. Berg. Additionally, before he spoke to Mr. Berg, Mr. Lytle had not discussed these alleged comments with Chief Kitchings, and he has offered no justification for his failure to do so. Even as to Lieutenant Coleman, there is no indication that, before he spoke to Mr. Berg, Mr. Lytle followed up his initial conversation about the “dead or dying” comments in any way. As the Supreme Court has noted, “[t]he burden of caution [an employee] bear[s] with respect to the words [he] speak[s]” varies with his job responsibilities.
Rankin,
Moreover, a government employee’s interest in whistleblowing is entitled to little weight if a reasonable person in his shoes would not have believed that there was government corruption or wrongdoing.
Cf. Moore,
As to the failure to render aid to Mr. Wilson, we do not believe that it was reasonable for Mr. Lytle to conclude that there was government misconduct. The evidence indicated that the officers’ decision not to perform CPR was based on the training that they had received. Moreover, Mr. Lytle himself had been trained not to move or give first aid to critically injured persons who are still breathing, because doing so risks further injury and might do more harm than good. See Aplt’s App. vol. I at 305 (Tr. of dep. of Mr. Lytle, dated Feb. 24, 1993). Although Mr. Lytle’s suggestion that direct pressure should have been applied to Mr. Wilson’s wound may merit evaluation by the Department, there is no evidence in the record indicating that the officers’ failure to render first aid was motivated by an intent to harm Mr. Wilson or reflected reckless indifference to his welfare. 3
We reach a similar conclusion as to Mr. Lytle’s allegation of a Department coverup. We note that, as evidence of such a cover-up, Mr. Lytle points only to the following: after the shooting, Mr. Lytle reported Lieutenant Powers’s “dead or dying” comment to Lieutenant Coleman, and Lieutenant Coleman did not order Mr. Lytle to make a report. See id. vol. Ill at 825-27. We do not believe that this evidence indicates that the Department was engaged in a cover-up. The record merely indicates that Lieutenant Coleman failed to order Mr. Lytle to submit a report. It does not suggest that Lieutenant Coleman, or anyone else, forbade, discouraged, or otherwise sought to prevent Mr. Lytle from filing reports that discussed the “dead or dying” comments either with Lieutenant Coleman or Chief Kitchings.
*867 Having concluded that Mr. Lytle’s interests are significantly diminished by his failure to pursue his concerns within the Department and by the lack of a reasonable factual basis for his allegations, we now consider the interests of Mr. Lytle’s employer. As explained below, we conclude that those interests are entitled to substantial weight.
We first note that there is undisputed evidence that, by speaking with Mr. Berg and the press, Mr. Lytle breached general Department confidentiality rules and specific orders not to discuss the Wilson matter with persons outside the Department. See, e.g., id. vol. Ill at 1083-85 (recording no objections to the district court’s statement that Mr. Lytle “admitted to Mr. Berg that he was under orders not to discuss the Wilson investigation”). Moreover, the City and Chief Kitchings presented affidavits from several officers and employee's demonstrating the effect of Mr. Lytle’s breach of confidentiality rule. According to these affidavits, after they learned of his statements to Mr. Berg and the press, Mr. Lytle’s co-employees no longer trusted him with confidential information regarding the Wilson investigation, or any other sensitive police matter. See id. vol. I, at 90-123. For example, they stated that, “[a]fter the allegations it seemed that no one really wanted to work with [Mr.] Lytle due to no trust,” id. at 90 (aff. of Mylain E. Anthis); that “[i]t was very hard to conduct telephone conversations with [Mr. Lytle] in the same room, in fear that I could be speaking about a case,” id. at 92 (aff. of John Coleman); and that “I no longer trusted [Mr.] Lytle — nor did his fellow officers and employees,” id. at 111 (aff. of Debbie Mann).- According to these officers, this lack of trust significantly damaged department morale and made it more difficult to do their jobs. See, e.g., id. at 110 (“Morale in the Department decreased significantly after [Mr.] Lytle’s statements.”), 116 (aff. of Michael McElroy) (“No one wanted to work with [Mr.] Lytle. I had to tell the officers that they had to at least be polite to him. In [l]aw [enforcement, officers have to work together and share information.”).
This circuit has recognized the importance of confidentiality to the performance of police officers’ responsibilities. “Any breach of confidentiality ... reflects negatively on an officer’s ability and competence to perform his job, and each officer’s competence affects the overall effectiveness of the department.”
Melton,
Although Mr. Lytle has not contested the defendants’ evidence regarding the damaging effects of his breach of confidentiality on the Department, he does argue that these effects were not considered at the time of his dismissal. Mr. Lytle notes that Chief Kitchings did not mention the effect of the statements to Mr. Berg and the press in the letter of termination or in interviews with the news media after the discharge. See Aplt’s App. vol. III, at 1019-22 (Tr. of interview with Judy Conklin, Haysville Pioneer, dated July 17,1991); see also id. at 964-66 (Notice of termination, dated July 16, 1991). He further notes that Chief Kitchings later testified during his deposition that it was not until after the termination that he became aware of workplace disharmony. See id. vol. I at 144 (Tr. of dep. of Chief Kitchings dated September 12, 1994), vol. Ill at 944 — 46 (Tr. *868 of dep. of Chief Etchings, dated Oct. 12, 1995). According to Mr. Lytle, Chief Eteh-ings’s failure to mention the effects of his breach of confidentiality until well after his termination precludes us from considering these effects in the Pickering balancing.
We are not persuaded by this argument. In weighing the government employer’s interests, the primary consideration is the impact of the disputed speech “on the effective functioning of the public employer’s enterprise.”
Rankin,
In the instant case, Chief Etchings’s failure to specifically mention the effects of Mr. Lytle’s breach of confidentiality rules on Department morale and efficiency does not diminish the weight we afford these effects in the
Pickering
inquiry. As we have noted, our decisions recognize that there is often a close connection between a police department’s confidentiality rules and the morale and effective functioning of the police force.
See, e.g., Melton,
For all of the foregoing reasons, we believe that the Pickering balancing tips in the defendants’ favor. The only factor weighing on Mr. Lytle’s side of the scales is Mr. Lytle’s whistle blower status, and the significance of even that factor is substantially diminished by Mr. Lytle’s failure to pursue his allegations within the Department and by the unreasonableness of his beliefs about government wrongdoing. Mr. Lytle’s limited interests are far outweighed by the Department’s interest in maintaining confidentiality and avoiding workplace disruption. Accordingly, the district court properly granted summary judgment to the defendants on Mr. Lytle’s First Amendment claim. 4
2. State-Law Retaliatory Discharge
We also disagree with Mr. Lytle that the district court erred in granting the defendants summary judgment on the state-law retaliatory discharge claim. When exercising jurisdiction over pendent state claims, we must apply the substantive law of the forum state and reach the same decision we believe that state’s highest court would, just as we would if our jurisdiction rested on diversity of citizenship.
See United Mine Workers v. Gibbs,
In
Palmer v. Brown,
Mr. Lytle argues that the district court erred in applying a clear and convincing standard of proof. He suggests that the appropriate standard is preponderance of the evidence, citing
Ortega v. IBP, Inc.,
Although
Ortega
involved retaliation for filing a workers compensation claim, rather than for whistle blowing,
see id.,
In discussing Mr. Lytle’s First Amendment claim, we concluded that Mr. Lytle did not have reasonable grounds for believing there was wrongdoing, either by the officers at the scene or in the Department’s internal investigation. We reached this conclusion based on the preponderance of the evidence standard that governs Mr.. Lytle’s First Amendment claim.
See Grogan v. Garner,
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the defendants are entitled to summary judgment on Mr. Lytle’s First Amendment and state-law retaliatory discharge claims. Accordingly, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. Mr. Lytle does not argue that there are any underlying factual disputes that affect the
Pickering
balancing and that should have been submitted to the jury. In this regard, we note that although the Supreme Court has concluded that "[t]he inquiry into the protected status of speech is one of law, not fact,”
see Connick,
This circuit appears not to have reached that qüestion, and other circuits are divided.
Compare Joyner v. Lancaster,
In the instant case, because Mr. Lytle does not contend that the district court improperly resolved factual issues underlying the Pickering balancing, we need not resolve this issue.
. This circuit has concluded that a witness's sworn testimony in a court proceeding is entitled to heightened protection under the Firsi Amendment. In
Melton v. City of Oklahoma City,
879
*865
F.2d 706, 714 (10th Cir.1989),
vacated on other grounds,
Other circuits have adopted a similar view.
See, e.g., Green v. Philadelphia Housing Authority,
In the instant case, because Mr. Lytle has not challenged the district court’s conclusion that his grand jury testimony was not at issue in his First Amendment claim, see Aplt’s App. vol. Ill at 1093-94, we need not decide what weight to afford this testimony in the Pickering balancing.
However, we do note that Chief Kitchings stated to a reporter that Mr. Lytle ”ha[d] a duly and obligation to testify to the grand jury” and that he did not terminate Mr. Lytle because of his grand jury testimony. See Aplt’s App. vol. Ill at 1017 (transcript of July 17, 1991 telephone conversation between Chief Kitchings and Phil Le-Beau.).
. Under Kansas law, second degree murder (the offense that Mr. Lytle accused the officers of committing) is defined as "the killing of a human being committed: (a) [¡Intentionally; or (b) unintentionally but recklessly under circumstances manifesting extreme indifference to the value of human life.” See Kan. Stat. Ann. § 21-3402 (1995).
. Because we conclude that there was no First Amendment violation, we need not consider whether Chief is entitled to qualified immunity.
See Martinez v. California,
