Thе defendant park district, an Illinois public entity, employed Sarah Atwell as its director of development. About 15 months after hiring her, the Park District retained a law firm to investigate allegations of “financial improprieties” and “misuse of funds,” including “unauthorized expenditures of Park District funds and the concealment of those expenditures.” A target of the investigation, Atwell was suspended with pay, told that an investigator would contact her, and instructed to cooperate with the investigation. She retained a lawyer. Shortly afterward, the investigator, a lawyer at the law firm investigating the allegations, met with Atwell in a parking lot to pick up some Park District property that Atwell had in her possession and in the course of this encounter told her that a grand jury was being convened to investigate the allegations and that, in light of the grand jury’s involvement, Atwell’s lawyer would probably advise her that it would be prudent for her to exercise her constitutional right to remain silent. Sure enough, her lawyer advised her not to agree to be interviewed by the investigating law firm. The Park District then fired Atwell (after notice and an opportunity for a hearing) for insubordination in failing to cooperate in the investigation and for receipt of unauthorized salary payments. The suit charges that her termination violated her right not to be compelled to incriminate herself and that after firing her the Park District deprived her of property without due process of law by publicly *990 releasing false information about her, including information that would prevent her from obtaining comparable employment. The district court dismissed the complaint for failure to state a claim.
The government is not allowed to force a person to make a stаtement, even out of court, that might be used as evidence that he had committed a crime. It is not even allowed to pressure him into cooperating by threatening to fire him (if he’s a government employee) for his refusing to provide such еvidence.
Gardner v. Broderick,
For these purposes, moreover, the state is treated as a unit: if the Park District insisted on Atwell’s giving evidence that might show shе had committed a crime, the state’s attorney could not use that evidence to prosecute her. Oddly, the cases do not bother to say this; but it is implicit in any case involving an employee of a department that does not do criminal prosecutions and it is his own department rather than the prosecutor that is interrogating him; and that of course is the standard case. See, e.g.,
Gulden v. McCorkle,
Our court has ruled in several cases that the government employer who wants to ask an emрloyee potentially incriminating questions must first
warn
him that because of the immunity to which the cases entitle him, he may not refuse to answer the questions on the ground that the answers may incriminate him.
Riggins v. Walter,
*991
Whatever the merits of the rule, and whether, in light of its rationale, it has any possible application when the employee has a lawyer, we have already registered our agreement with the Fifth Circuit that there can be no duty to warn until the employee is asked specific questions.
Riggins v. Walter, supra,
Atwell was not being asked to meet with the investigator in the absence of her lawyer. With her lawyer at her elbow to advise her, she would have known which questions she could refuse to answer (but for immunity) on sеlf-incrimination grounds. If she refused to answer a question on such grounds, and if our rule applies even when the employee who is being questioned has a lawyer — even when the lawyer is present at the interrogation— that would be the time to warn her that if she refused to answer the question despite the immunity the Fifth Amendment would not protect her from being fired for refusing to cooperate in the investigation.
The wrinkle here is that the investigator (concededly an agent of the Park District for these purposes though employed by the law firm that the District had retained to investigate the allegations of financial improprieties) gave Atwell misleading advice — basically not to cooperate with the investigation. It was in the form of a prediction, but was likely to be, and we may assume was, interpreted as legal advice. Had Atwell not had a lawyer, the Park District might conceivably (our tentativeness is deliberate) be estopped to deny that Atwell had a Fifth Amendment right not to cooperate with the investigation, though most cases refuse to base estoppel on a misrepresentation of law, reasoning that the plaintiff could have consulted a lawyer. E.g.,
Utah Power & Light Co. v. Federal Ins. Co.,
It is doubtful that estoppel could ever bring a case in which there was no violation of the Constitution into federal court under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, the statute under which Atwell sued, which creates a remedy for violations of federal rights under colоr of state law. Atwell had no federal right, whatever the Park District may have told her. The Park District therefore could not have violated her federal rights. If it misled her into not cooperating with the investigation and then fired her for not cooperating, it might be guilty of fraud or breach of contract under state law,
Board of Education v. A, C & S, Inc.,
If she had had a contract under which she could be fired only for cause (which apparently she did not), she might have tried to estop the Park District to plead that her refusal to cooperate with its investigation was cause for firing her, though she would doubtless be met by the proposition of Illinois law that estoppel will lie against public agencies only in extraordinary situations,
Cities Service Oil Co. v. City of Des Plaines,
Even if we brush
all
these problems to one side, we are left with the bedrock principle that a
reasonable
person represented by a lawyer does not rely on the legal adviсe given him by an adversary, which was the status of the investigator in relation to Atwell, as she well knew. A reasonable person in Atwell’s position consults his or her own lawyer. Atwell did. The lawyer gave her bad advice. For that she may have a remedy agаinst the lawyer, but she has no remedy against the Park District. Estoppel requires
reasonable
reliance on the misrepresentation of the party who is sought to be estopped.
Heckler v. Community Health Services of Crawford County, Inc.,
Atwell’s other claim is unrelated to the Fifth Amendment’s self-incrimination clause. It invokes the principle that
*993
while reputation is not liberty or property within the meaning of the due process clauses, and so defamation, a tortious injury to reputation, is not a constitutional tort, e.g.,
Siegert v. Gilley,
Ordinarily a plaintiff is not required to plead specifics.
Swierkiewicz v. Sorema N. A.,
Affirmed.
