This case requires us to decide whether a police officer sued for making an allegedly illegal arrest can invoke the “related crimes” defense in asserting qualified immunity. The defense, adopted by a number of other circuits, provides “that even where there is no probable cause to arrest the plaintiff for the crime charged, proof of probable cause to arrest the plaintiff for a related offense is also a defense which may entitle the arresting officer to qualified immunity.”
Avery v. King,
I.
This case stems from an altercation between two neighbors in the town of Plymouth, Massachusetts. 1 Following a long and contentious relationship with Warren Baker, Richard Sheehy got into an argument with Baker on Baker’s property. Baker punched Sheehy in the eye and, in an effort to stop Baker from hitting him again, Sheehy grabbed Baker’s shoulder. Sheehy lost his balance and fell on top of Baker. Baker started yelling for someone to call the police.
A number of officers arrived at the scene. They were familiar with Baker, having been called to Baker’s residence on a number of prior occasions, and they did *18 not take the situation very seriously. A sergeant at the scene questioned Sheehy about the disturbance and asked him if he was going to file a complaint. Sheehy informed the sergeant that he would not be filing a complaint.
Officer Quinn then arrived at the scene. She first went to Baker’s house where Baker told her that Sheehy had assaulted and kicked him. Officer Quinn had been to Baker’s house before to investigate disturbances, and had always found him to be truthful. Although she could smell alcohol on his breath, she did not think he was drunk. Officer Quinn then went across the street to Sheehy’s driveway where Sheehy was washing his boat. There were four bystanders in the driveway, and one of them was shouting and visibly upset. Officer Quinn attempted to question Sheehy, but he refused to respond, telling Officer Quinn that he had already given his name and address to the sergeant. She told him that “I’m the investigating officer now, and I am not going to put up with this ... you know, either you give me identification or I arrest you.” Sheehy put his hands out and said, “Then just arrest me.” Officer Quinn said, “You’re under arrest.” Sheehy asked what he was being arrested for and Officer Quinn responded: “For not giving me your name.” Sheehy, a retired state trooper, told her she did not have the authority to arrest him for failure to provide his name. Officer Quinn’s partner then told Sheehy that he was being arrested for being a disorderly person. Sheehy asked how he could be a disorderly person in his own yard and added, “What constitutes being disorderly, I haven’t opened my mouth.” Officer Quinn’s partner responded, “Failure to give your name.”
Sheehy was handcuffed and taken to the police station where he was charged with assault and battery with a dangerous weapon 2 and being a disorderly person. Sheehy pled not guilty at his arraignment. At a pretrial conference, the district attorney refused to prosecute and the charges were dismissed.
Sheehy then filed suit in Massachusetts state court against Officer Quinn and the town of Plymouth, pursuant inter alia to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging that his arrest was in violation of the Fourth Amendment because Officer Quinn did not have probable cause to arrest him for disorderly conduct or assault and battery with a dangerous weapon. The case was subsequently removed to the federal district court for the District of Massachusetts. After removal, Officer Quinn filed a motion for summary judgment, claiming that she was entitled to qualified immunity. The district court agreed, adopting the related crimes defense. The district court concluded that Officer Quinn had probable cause to arrest Sheehy for simple assault and battery, and further concluded that assault and battery and the crime charged at the police station (i.e., assault and battery with a dangerous weapon) were clearly related. The district court entered a summary judgment against Sheehy on his one federal claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and remanded the remaining state law claims for disposition in the state court. Sheehy now appeals.
II.
The district court’s entry of summary judgment is reviewed de novo.
See Vargas-Badillo v. Diaz-Torres,
Generally, government officials performing discretionary functions (such as arrests) are shielded from civil damages so long as their conduct “does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.”
Vargas-Badillo,
Where an arrest is “challenged as unsupported by probable cause [it] is deemed ‘objectively reasonable’ unless ‘there
dearly
was no probable cause at the time the arrest was made.’ ”
Topp v. Wolkowski,
Several circuits have held that “even where there is no probable cause to arrest the plaintiff for the crime charged, proof of probable cause to arrest the plaintiff for a related offense is also a defense which may entitle the arresting officer to qualified immunity.”
Avery v. King,
Our reading of the cases suggests that “relatedness” has two requirements. First, the crime with which the arrestee is
*20
charged and the crime offered to the court as a justification for the arrest must relate to the same conduct. Second, as a corollary of this first requirement, the two crimes must share similar elements or be directed generally at prohibiting the same type of conduct.
See generally Avery,
The related crimes defense is consistent with the teachings of
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
In the usual case involving the related crimes defense, the crime or crimes formally charged are identical to those cited by the officer at the time of the arrest. Thus, there is usually no need to ask whether the related crimes analysis should focus on the conduct underlying the crime cited by the officer at the time of the arrest or, instead, the conduct underlying the crime cited a short time later at the police station. The crimes are the same. Here that question must be asked because Officer Quinn said at the scene that she was arresting Sheehy for being a disorderly person in his interaction with her, but later at the police station he was also charged with assault and battery with a dangerous weapon because of his altercation with Baker. The district court concluded that it was appropriate to analyze the conduct underlying the assault and battery with a dangerous weapon charge lodged at the police station in applying the related crimes defense. We disagree.
When Officer Quinn arrived at the scene, she first interviewed Baker. He informed Officer Quinn that Sheehy had assaulted him. Officer Quinn then went across the street to continue her investigation in Sheehy’s driveway. When Sheehy refused to cooperate, Officer Quinn arrested him for disorderly conduct on the basis of his conduct in the driveway. The record makes clear that Sheehy’s interaction with Officer Quinn was the sole basis for the arrest. It was only later, at the police station, that Officer Quinn also charged Sheehy with both disorderly conduct and assault and battery with a dangerous weapon. In other words, the additional charge at the police station had nothing to do with the conduct for which Sheehy was actually arrested — his conduct in the driveway. The arrest charge and the charge lodged at the police station pertained to distinct events involving Sheehy’s conduct with different people.
Although we are mindful that qualified immunity “gives ample room for mistaken
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judgments,”
Rivera,
Our decision in
Santiago v. Fenton,
Santiago sued the officers pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The officers argued that they were entitled to qualified immunity because, even in the absence of probable cause for the disorderly conduct charge relating to the incident in the apartment complex, they had probable cause to arrest for the earlier snowball incident. See id. at 383. Although we did not discuss the related crimes defense in Santiago, we rejected the officers’ claim, noting that the officers had unambiguously testified that the snowball incident had nothing to do with the arrest, and that the plaintiff was arrested for striking and pushing the officers in the apartment building. See id. at 383. We would not permit the officers to validate the arrest retroactively based on earlier conduct that unmistakably did not serve as the basis for the challenged arrest. We have made the same judgment in this case.
In its grant of summary judgment for Officer Quinn, the district court questioned whether our analysis of qualified immunity in Santiago v. Fenton could be reconciled with the related crimes defense. We see no conflict. Contrary to the suggestion of the district court, our reliance on the testimony of the officers about the basis for the arrest in Santiago does not implicate the officers’ subjective motivations for arresting the plaintiff, nor does it condition the *22 availability of the immunity defense on the legal ■ correctness of the criminal charge articulated by the officers in describing the conduct that prompted their arrest decision. We used the statements of the officers in Santiago about the basis for the arrest as objective indicators of the conduct underlying the arrest in order to understand which of two discrete incidents prompted the arrest. Without such an inquiry, we could not have known which facts to consider in determining whether the arrest was made pursuant to probable cause. We have used the statements of Officer Quinn and her partner about the basis for the arrest of Sheehy in the same fashion.
III.
The district court used the assault and battery with a dangerous weapon charge, lodged at the police station, as the basis for its conclusion that Officer Quinn had probable cause to arrest Sheehy for the related offense of assault and battery. Thus the court did not consider whether Officer Quinn clearly did not have probable cause to arrest Sheehy for disorderly conduct, the stated basis for the arrest. Given our rejection of the court’s application of the related crimes defense to the charge lodged at the police station, we must consider whether Officer Quinn had probable cause to arrest Sheehy for the crime of disorderly conduct. 5
Sheehy was charged with a violation of Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 272, § 53, which makes it a crime to be an “idle and disorderly person[].” A person is disorderly under the statute “if, with purpose to cause public
6
inconvenience, annoyance or alarm, or recklessly creating a risk thereof, he: (a) engages in fighting or threatening, or in violent or tumultuous behavior ... or (c) creates a hazardous or physically offensive condition by any act which serves no legitimate purpose of the actor.”
Commonwealth v. Feigenbaum,
[T]he type of conduct which the disorderly person provision of § 53 reaches is that conduct which by its very nature involves the use of physical force or violence or any threat to use such force or violence if that threat is objectively possible of immediate execution. Also covered is “tumultuous behavior,” which while perhaps not physically violent, may nevertheless be characterized as involving riotous commotion and excessively unreasonable noise so as to constitute a public nuisance. Conduct which creates a condition of physical menace to others is also reached....
Commonwealth v. A Juvenile,
When a defendant moves for summary judgment on qualified immunity grounds, “we must credit the plaintiffs version of defendants’ actions to the extent that plaintiff has appropriately supported his version.”
Amsden v. Moran,
Therefore, on the basis of this record, Officer Quinn should not have been granted summary judgment. If a jury were to believe Sheehy’s version of events, it reasonably could find that Officer Quinn clearly did not have probable cause to arrest him for disorderly conduct. According to Officer Quinn, however, Sheehy not only refused to give his name, but also paced around in an agitated fashion when she tried to talk to him, displayed aggressive body language, and advanced toward her “in a very threatening manner.” A jury believing that version of the facts could reasonably conclude that it was not clear that Officer Quinn lacked probable cause to arrest Sheehy for disorderly conduct. We must therefore vacate the judgment of the district court and remand.
Judgment vacated. Remanded for further proceedings.
Notes
. When reviewing a motion for summary judgment, we review all material facts in a light most favorable to the nonmoving party.
See Vargas-Badillo v. Diaz-Torres,
. Sheehy was wearing shower shoes at tire time of the alleged assault on Baker. On this basis, he was charged with assault and battery with a dangerous weapon (shod foot).
See Commonwealth v. Zawatsky,
41 Mass.App. Ct. 392,
. Of the related crimes cases we have reviewed, we have found only one case where there was a difference between the officer's stated basis for arrest and the crimes later charged.
See Gassner v. City of Garland,
. It is not clear exactly how much time elapsed between the snowball incident and the incident in the apartment building. According to the plaintiff’s statements, a considerable time had elapsed.
. Because Officer Quinn did not assert a related crimes defense based on a crime related to disorderly conduct, we need not consider whether she had probable cause to arrest Sheehy for any such related crime.
. " ‘Public’ means affecting or likely to affect persons in a place to which the public or a substantial group has access.”
Alegata v. Commonwealth,
