ORDER
Aрpellee’s request for publication is GRANTED. The Memorandum disposition, filed January 8, 2009, is withdrawn. A published Opinion will be filed concurrently with this Order.
OPINION
Plaintiff Richard Robinson (“Robinson”), a sergeant with the Los Angeles County Office of Public Safety (“OPS”), filed a civil rights complaint under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against the County of Los Angeles (“Los Angeles”) and several OPS officers (“Defendants”) alleging that he was denied promotion in violation of his First and Fourteenth Amendment rights because he reported misconduct within his department. Defendants appeal from the denial of qualified immunity. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Robinson alleges that he was not promoted because he spoke out or filed reports about misconduct in his department between 2002 and 2006. In addition to testifying in a class action lawsuit alleging discrimination by OPS, Robinson also filed misconduct reports pertaining to various problematic behavior, some of which he observed while off duty. The reports de *821 scribed (1) a fellow officer who allegedly worked for an outside employer while on the clock, (2) officers who appeared to be drinking alcohol during work hours, (3) OPS officers who wore distinctive tattoos possibly indicаtive of anti-Semitic attitudes, (4) cases of potential battery or excessive force, and (5) a “Parking for Irish Only” sign allegedly placed by OPS officers and directed at a fellow officer. After failing to receive what he considered an adequate response from OPS, Robinson took several steps following-up on these reports, including emailing internal affairs and discussing the details of the complaints with superior officers.
Robinson alleges that he participated in several conversations in which his superior officers suggested he stop filing misconduct reports. In one such conversation, a supervising officer told him that “if [Robinson] didn’t bring so many issues forward ... maybe that would help in terms of getting promoted to lieutenant.”
Robinson took an examination for promotion to lieutenant in 2003. Despite placing in the highest band of candidates and receiving favorable work reviews, Robinson was not promoted before the eligibility list expired in 2006.
After failing to obtain a promotion, Robinson filed this action alleging that he had been denied promotion in retaliation for exercising his First Amendment rights. Defendants moved for summary judgment, arguing that Rоbinson’s reports were not protected speech because they were made as part of his professional duties or because he failed to present the reports through the chain of command as required by written department policy. The district court denied the motion, finding genuine issues of material fact on the scope of Robinson’s job duties and hоlding that a violation of a written chain of command policy was not dispositive, but merely one of the factors to be considered as part of the balancing test established in
Pickering v. Board of Education,
II. JURISDICTION AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review de novo a district court’s denial of summary judgment based upon a claim of qualified immunity.
Moran v. Washington,
III. DISCUSSION
Determining whether officials are owed qualified immunity involves two inquiries: (1) whether, taken in the light most favorable to the party asserting the injury, the facts alleged show the official’s conduct violated a constitutional right; and (2) if so, whether the right was clearly-established in light of the specific context of the case.
Saucier v. Katz,
In evaluating a First Amendment retaliation claim, we address “a sequential five-step series of questions.”
Eng v. Cooley,
Public Concern
To warrant First Amendment protection, an employee’s speech must address “a matter of legitimate public concern.”
Pickering,
As a matter of law, “the competency of the police force is surely a matter of great public concern.”
McKinley v. City of Eloy,
Robinson alleges Defendants retaliated against him for, among other things, testifying in a class action lawsuit that the County had engaged in systematic discrimination and harassment against OPS officers, reporting numerous instances of possible corruption, discrimination, or misconduct by fellow OPS officers, and following up on those complaints. With the exception of the three incidents identified by the district court as individual personnel disputes, each of these is clearly a “matter of public concern.”
See Thomas v. City of Beaverton,
Defendants concede that some of Robinson’s “internal reports of certain alleged misconduct involved matters of public concern,” but contend that others did not. They specifically argue that Robinson’s follow-up communications pressing his reports of misconduct are not “matters of public concern,” citing
Douglas v.
Lexi
ngtorir-Fayette Urban County Gov’t,
Robinson’s misconduct reports, unlike the plaintiffs’ speech in
Douglas,
did not merely contain “passing references to public safety [that] were ‘incidental to the message conveyed,’ ”
id.,
but rather related to the danger the misconduct posed and the' need to respond to it. ' Whether OPS treats complaints of misconduct seriously or fails to followup is also a matter of “relevance to the public’s evaluation of the performance of governmental agencies” and consequently independently a matter of public concern.
Coszalter v. City of Salem,
Defendants suggest that two of Robinson’s misconduct reports — one regarding an оfficer suspected of working for an outside employer while on the clock and another alleging discrimination by one officer against another — addressed individual personnel disputes, not matters of public concern. Reports pertaining to others, even if they concern personnel matters including discriminatory conduct, can still be “protected under the public concern test.”
Thomas,
Robinson’s testimony in a class action against the County is also of public concern, regardless of whether it had an impact on the result of that litigation.
Alpha Energy Savers,
Scope of Job Duties
Defendants also argue that Robinson’s reports were made in conjunction with his official job duties and therefore were not prоtected by the First Amendment under
Garcetti v. Ceballos,
Adequate Justification under Pickering
Under the balancing-test mandated by
Pickering,
When applying
Pickering
to an “employee’s reports of ‘wastefulness, mismanagement, unethical conduct, violations of regulations, and incompetence’ ” to his supervisors, we have held “that the public’s interest in learning about illegal conduct by public officials and other matters at the core of First Amendment prоtection outweighs a state employer’s interest in avoiding a mere potential disturbance to the workplace.” Keyser,
In the Defendants’ view, an exception to this clearly established law applies here because there is “no constitutional violation in requiring officers to communicate ‘through channels’ before enlisting public opinion to their cause.”
Sanchez v. City of Santa Ana,
Under some factual circumstances, therefore, the
Pickering
balancing test can favor protected speech even where the speech violates the employer’s written policy requiring speech to occur through specified channels.
Anderson v. Central Point School Dist.,
Although we have sometimes found a police department’s interests in discipline and
esprit de corps
to outweigh First Amendment interests, genuine factual disputes here — including, for example, the extent of potential workplace disruption and whether the justifications Defendants assert for their actions were pretextual — preclude such a determination at this stage of the litigation.
See, e.g., Cochran,
Given the evidence that Defendants may have been more concerned with the nature and frequency of Robinson’s reports of misconduct than his adherence to the formal chain of command, a fact-finder could conclude that Defendants’ application of the chain of command policy was pretextual and not based on Defendants’ interest in avoiding workplace disruption. If a fact-finder did so conclude, then Robinson’s speech interests would outweigh Defendants’ interests under
Pickering.
Where, as here, the
Pickering
test must be -applied and “there are underlying factual issues regarding the extent of office disruption,” it is proper to deny a motion for summary judgment.
Roth,
But-For Causation
Defendants may avoid liability by showing that Robinson’s protected speech was not a but-for cause of the adverse employment action.
See Mt. Healthy City School Dist. Bd. of Educ. v. Doyle,
Although Defendants are free to argue at trial that they would have taken the same adverse employment actions against Robinson regardless of his speech, Robinson has adequately alleged that the “chain of command” policy was used as a prеtext and that the adverse actions ag;ainst him occurred because of the content of his protected speech, not the manner in which he filed his complaints. This factual dispute cannot be resolved on summary judgment.
Clearly Established
Where a “constitutional right would have been violated were [the plaintiffs]. allegations established,” a court must also determine whether the right was сlearly established.
Saucier,
The plaintiff “bears the burden of proving that the rights [he] claims were ‘clearly established’ at the time of the alleged violation.”
Moran,
All of the relevant decisions defining' the scopе of Robinson’s constitutional rights were decided well before April of 2005, when Robinson first might have been considered for promotion to lieutenant, giving Defendants adequate notice that their actions would violate those rights. The Supreme Court had decided
Pickering,
establishing that the First Amendment protects employee speech on matters of “legitimate public concern,” in 1968.
Pickering,
An employer’s written policy requiring spеech to occur through specified “channels” had been held insufficient to justify retaliation motivated by protected speech.
Anderson,
Therefore, at the time defendants acted in 2005 and 2006, both the constitutional protection of employee speech and a First Amendment cause of action for retaliation against protected speech were clearly established and potentially applicable to Defendants’ conduct. 3
The district court’s denial of summary judgment is therefore
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. We need not address the third question at the summary stage because Defendants concеde that there is a material factual dispute regarding whether Robinson's speech was a substantial or motivating factor in the adverse employment action.
. Defendants also cite
Akins v. Gates,
. Although the Supreme Court recently carved out an exception to this clearly established law for “expressions employees make pursuant to their professional duties” in
Garcetti,
