ON PETITION FOR REHEARING
The petition for panel rehearing is GRANTED. The opinion,
This case involves the defendants-appellants’ challenge to the district court’s denial of their motion to dismiss the plaintiffs-appellees’ claims brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1994) and state tort law. The defendants-appellants moved to dismiss the plaintiffs-appellees’ claims under Fed.R.Civ.Proc. 12(b)(6) claiming qualified immunity. The district court denied the defendants-appellants’ motion. For the reasons stated below, we REVERSE the district court’s ruling.
Factual and Procedural History
Plaintiff-appellee Cherie Shipp (“Shipp”) was involved in an abusive marriage with her husband, Dalton Shipp (“Dalton”) in Shreveport, Louisiana. To escape her husband’s abuse, Shipp moved into her sister’s home near Minden, Louisiana. When Dalton learned of Shipp’s whereabouts, he made several threatening phone calls to her, which she reported to deputies of the Webster Parish Sheriffs Office (“WPSO”). On several occasions, Dalton also drove by the home of Shipp’s sister. Shipp reported these “drive-bys” to defendant-appellant Steve Cropper (“Cropper”), a Webster Parish deputy. Cropper informed Shipp that he would do nothing about Daltоn.
Shipp then moved to her cousin’s residence in Dubberly, which is also in Webster Parish. Dalton went to the house in Dubberly, attacked Shipp by beating her with a telephone that he ripped from the wall, and hit her with his fist. He forewarned. Shipp that if she reported the incident to law enforcement, she would “find herself in the hospital.” After physically abusing her, Dalton took some items belonging to Shipp and her cousin, placed them in his automobile, and drove off. Despite Dalton’s admonition, Shipp called the WPSO. Deputy Cropper came to the scene and tоok a report, but made no immediate effort to arrest Dalton.
Several days later, Deputy Cropper approached Dalton about returning the items that he took from the residence of Shipp’s cousin, but did not arrest him. Afterward, Dalton was allowed to turn himself in, and he was charged with simple criminal damage to property and simple battery, both misdemeanor offenses. As a condition of bail, the court ordered that Dalton stay away from Shipp. Dalton pleaded guilty to both offenses, and the court ordered him to seek immediate counseling. The court set sentencing for a later date.
Shipp obtained a temporary restraining order (“TRO”) that prohibited Dalton from having any contact with her. After Deputy Cropper served Dalton with the TRO, Dalton made several abusive and threatening phone calls to Shipp, which Shipp reported to the WPSO. She was told that nothing could be done about the phone calls, and despite his violations of the TRO
Dalton failed to appear in court for sentencing on the criminal charges, and a bench warrant for his arrest was issued. Although Daltоn eventually appeared in court to answer other unrelated criminal charges at the Webster Parish courthouse, deputies nonetheless failed to arrest him for violating the TRO and conditions of bail.
Approximately four months after Dalton failed to appear at the scheduled sentencing hearing for the offenses committed against Shipp, Dalton tracked down Shipp at her other sister’s house and convinced Shipp to come out of the house „ and get into his car. Once in the car, Dalton sped away with Shipp’s feet dragging thе ground. She attempted to jump out of the car, but Dalton grabbed her by the head and drove Shipp to a house that he had leased in Webster Parish.
Shipp’s sister telephoned her mother, Carolyn Gates, who reported the incident to the WPSO. Defendant-appellant Betty Shipp, Dalton’s mother, was the dispatcher who received the phone call. Apparently, she hung up the telephone without conducting an inquiry into the particulars of the incident before advising Deputy Cropper of the call. He chose to take no action, despite his knowledge of Dalton’s propensity for violent behavior. Neither Cropper nor Betty Shipp dispatched information to alert the other deputies.
After Betty Shipp terminated the phone call, Shipp’s mother called the Minden Police Department, which dispatched an emergency alert and radioed the WPSO. Shipp’s mother then picked up Jerry Gates, Shipp’s father, and drove to the Webster Parish courthouse. They observed Deputy Cropper standing idly outside the courthouse. Cropper advised Mr. Gates that he intended to do nothing to apprehend Dalton. After they discussed where Dalton may be located with Shipp, Mr. Gates denounced Cropper’s unwillingness to act, and told him that he was heading to Dalton’s leased house. Deputy Cropper and another deputy pursued Mr. Gates.
Subsequently, Mr. Gates and four deputies arrived at the house. When the deputies made no effort to enter the house, Mr. Gates attempted to approach the house, but was restrained by the deputies. Cropper then knocked on the door, explaining that he had to ascertain whether Shipp was voluntarily in the house with Dalton. No one inside answered Cropper’s knock.
At Dalton’s house, Mr. Gates observed what he believed to be a silhouette on a curtain showing a person with a gun. Mr. Gates again attempted to approach the house, but the deputies ordered him back. A shot rang out from the house and the deputies immediately retreated to their vehicles to put on armored vests. Another shot rang out as the deputies remained crouched behind their cars.
Inside the house, Dalton had raped Shipp. After shoоting her in the chest with a 12-gauge shotgun, he shot himself. Shipp staggered to the door and unsuccessfully attempted to open it. She screamed for help, but none of the deputies responded. Shipp eventually staggered out a side door holding her entrails in her hands.
As she exited the house, Shipp’s mother and a deputy raced to her aid. Mr. Gates also dashed toward Shipp, but Cropper abruptly intercepted him. At Cropper’s order, another deputy handcuffed Mr. Gates and removed him from the scene.
Shipp was transported to a hospital, where she underwent emergency surgery. She was hospitalized for several weeks, followed by rehabilitation, therapy, and more surgery. Dalton recovered from his wounds and was subsequently charged with aggravated rape, aggravated kidnapping, and attempted second degree murder. Following the incident, the WPSO took no disciplinary action against any deputy.
Standard of Review
Denials of motions to dismiss on qualified immunity grounds are appealable collateral orders when based on issues of law.
Mitchell v. Forsyth,
Discussion
The defendants argue that they are entitled to qualified immunity because Shipp failed to plead that the defendants violated clearly established law. In other words, the defendants maintain that when the alleged improper conduct occurred, there existed no clearly established law recognizing an Equal Protection claim based on law enforcement policies, practices, and customs toward domestic abuse cases.
Qualified Immunity
The qualified immunity analysis involves a two-step process. First, we examine whether the plaintiff has alleged a violation of a clearly established constitutional right.
See Siegert v. Gilley,
Clearly Established Right
When evaluating a claim of qualified immunity under the “clearly established right” prong, a court first must determine whether the “ ‘plaintiff has alleged the deprivation of an actual constitutional right at all, and if so, proceed to determine whether that right was clearly established at the time of the alleged violatiоn.’ ”
Wilson v. Layne,
The first cases testing the viability of an Equal Protection claim relating to law enforcement policies, customs, and practices toward domestic abuse cases were filed in the mid-1970s. However, those cases were ultimately settled before trial.
2
The first reported case holding that a law enforcement policy that treated victims of domestic abuse differently than victims of non-domestic assault constituted an Equal Protection violation was decided in 1984.
See Thurman v. City of Torrington,
In 1989, the Supreme Court decided
DeShaney v. Winnebago County Dep’t of Soc. Servs.,
The same year
DeShaney
was decided, we addressed for the first time whether a plaintiffs claim based on police inaction, and law enforcement policies and customs that allegedly treated victims of domestic assault differently from victims of other crimes violate the Equal Protection Clause as contеmplated by the Supreme Court in DeShaney’s footnote three. In
McKee v. City of Rockwall, Texas,
Approximately eleven years after McKee, we are again called upon to address whether a domestic abuse victim’s complaint against a law enforcement agency and its officials for failure to effectuate an arrest, and for their adoption of policies, practices, and customs that discriminate against victims of domestic assault constitute intentional discrimination against women, and thus is сognizable under the Equal Protection Clause. Specifically, Shipp claims that the defendants through their policies, practices, and customs afforded less protection to victims of domestic assault than other assault victims. Furthermore, Shipp claims that these policies, customs, and practices disproportionately impact women because an overwhelming majority of the victims of domestic assaults are women. The issues raised in Shipp’s complaint invoke the unresolved questions of McKee.
Before addressing
McKee’s,
unresolved questions, we recognize that governmental policies, which create neutral classifications that have a disproportionate adverse impact upon a protected class, are unconstitutional under the Equal Protection Clause only if the disproportionate impact can be traced to a discriminatory purpose.
Personnel Administrator of Mass. v. Feeney,
In addressing the questions
McKee
left open, we observe that courts from other circuits have addressed similar Equal Protection challenges based on law enforcement policies, practices, and customs that treat victims of domestic assault differently from other crime victims. In
Watson v. City of Kansas City,
Several other circuits have adopted the standard articulated in
Watson
to review Equal Protection claims brought by victims of domestic assault.
See Soto v. Flores,
We agree with our sister circuits that the standard articulated in
Watson
represents a coherent approach for courts to review Equal Protection claims pertaining to law enforcement’s practices, policies, and customs toward domestic assault cases. First, the standard allows law enforcement officials the flexibility and discretion to adopt and employ policies that are tailored to address the special concerns that domestic assault cases raise without compromising the protective services that law enforcement рrovides.
5
Law enforcement “discretion is essential to the criminal justice process.”
McCleskey v. Kemp,
Therefore, today we join the circuits that have adopted
Watson’s
approach, and hold that to sustain a gender-based Equal Protection claim based on law enforcement policies, practices, and customs toward domestic assault and abuse eases, a plaintiff must show: (1) the existence of a policy, practice, or custom of law enforcement to provide less protection to victims of domestic assault than to victims of other assaults; (2) that discrimination against women was a motivating factor; and (3) that the plaintiff was injured by the policy, custom, or practice. By adopting this approach to answer the pretermitted question in
McKee,
we accomplish one of the principal goals оf qualified immunity, which is to provide objective standards so that “an official [can] be expected to know that certain conduct [] violatefs] statutory or constitutional rights.”
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
We turn now to consider Shipp’s claim. In order to defeat the defendants’ assertion of qualified immunity, Shipp must
To show that a right is clearly established, the plaintiff does not have to refer to precedent that is directly on point, or that declares that the conduct in question is unlawful. Rather, the right is clearly established if based on pre-existing law, the unlawfulness of the conduct in question is apparent.
Doe v. Taylor Independent School Dist.,
To date, the only other case in our circuit that has spoken on this Equal Protection issue is McKee. Since our holding in McKee, there has been no intervening precedent from this circuit or the Supreme Court addressing an Equal Protection claim based on law enforcement policies, practices, and customs toward victims of domestic assaults. Although McKee was decided a year after Watson, McKee contains no language rejecting or approving the standard articulated in Watson.
Thus, we recognize that the delicately counterpoised compеting considerations undergirding the doctrine of qualified immunity and their resulting jurisprudence are instructive in the case at bar. Persons whose federal rights have been violated by government officials’ abuse of their positions should have a means of vindication that includes pursuing monetary compensation. But government officials should be uninhibited by the chilling • specter of civil litigation and personal liability to exercise the discretion requisite to perform their duties so long as the officials’ conduct does not violate clearly established law.
See Owen v. City of Independence, Missouri,
Class of One Equal Protection Claims
Although no general constitutional right to police protection exists, the state may not discriminate in providing such protection.
McKee,
According to the complaint, Betty Shipp was intimately involved in the situation that precipitated the case at bar. Not only is she Dalton’s mother but she was also a deputy in the WPSO during the time he stalked, threatened, and harassed Shipp as well as when Dalton pled guilty to charges of criminal damage to property and simple battery as a result of his attacking Shipp and taking her belongings. Betty Shipp was still a WPSO deputy when the aforementioned behavior prompted the court to issue a temporary restraining order against Dalton prohibiting harassment or abuse of or contact with Shipp as well as when the court issued a bench warrant for Dalton’s arrest following his subsequent failure to appear.
Moreover, the pleadings further аllege that Betty Shipp actually received the call of Carolyn Gates, Shipp’s mother, alerting the WPSO that Dalton had kidnapped Shipp, warning them that the situation was volatile, and beseeching the officers to intervene. Betty Shipp responded by hanging up on Carolyn Gates, and although she advised Cropper of the call, neither deputy dispatched a radio transmission to inform other deputies of Carolyn Gates’ complaint. Consequently, after he malevolently kidnapped Shipp, Dalton brutally raped and viciously shot her in the chest with а 12-gauge shotgun.
It is undisputed that Betty Shipp’s son engaged in reprehensible behavior against her daughter-in-law that finally resulted in law enforcement and judicial intervention. It is not improbable that Betty Shipp developed some animosity against her daughter-in-law during her volatile relationship with Dalton or after Shipp fled when Dalton’s escalated abuse prompted criminal charges against him. If deputy Betty
Conclusion
We REVERSE the district court’s denial of the defendants’ motion to dismiss under Fed.R.CivProC. 12(b)(6), and hold that the defendants are entitled to qualified immunity. We REMAND to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. Sheriff Riser succeeded Sheriff McMahon after the rape and shooting incident.
. See Gender Based Discrimination in Police Reluctance to Respond to Domestic Assault Complaints, 75 Geo. L.J. 667, 677 (1986).
. The Court ultimately held that the state did not have a constitutional duty under substantive due process to protect the plaintiff from his abusive father after receiving reports of possible abuse.
DeShaney,
. Although the Ninth Circuit has not specifically adopted
Watson,
the court in
Balistreri v. Pacifica Police Dept.,
. Because domestic assault cases usually involve parties in volatile intimate or familial relationships, we acknowledge that special law enforcement tactics may be employed in these instances that may be impracticable in other assault cases. As one court noted, " there are inherent differences between domestic disputes and nondomestic disputes, ... that may affect an officer’s decision to arrest or not to arrest in any given situation.”
Ricketts,
. This court has yet to confront an Equal Protection challenge in the context of a class of one claim.
See Bryan v. City of Madison,
