Thеodore Smith appeals the district court’s dismissal of his claims against David Plati, the Assistant Athletic Director for Media Relations of the University of Colorado, the Regents of the University, and the University itself. In addition, Smith alleges that the district court erred when it ordered him to dismiss a parallel state court action raising virtually identical claims to those in his federal lawsuit. We AFFIRM the district court’s dismissal, and, thus, hold that Smith’s final allegation is moot. 1
*1172 BACKGROUND
A. Smith’s Allegations
Theodore Smith launched and maintains a non-profit website named Netbuffs.com. It provides information, picturеs, chat rooms, and message boards covering men’s and women’s athletic teams at the University of Colorado at Boulder. Smith is also a practicing Colorado attorney.
David Plati is the University’s Assistant Athletic Director for Media Relations. The Athletic Media Relations Office is the liaison between the University’s athletic department and members of the media.
Smith contends that “[beginning in approximately the month of August, 1998,” Plati decided “to censor Net-buffs.com and to do everything possible to interfere with it.” Smith alleges that while “Plati’s motivеs ... are unclear, ... it appears he has concluded Netbuffs.com is in some way in competition with the website still operated by the University’s Office of Media Relations.” For purposes of this appeal, the most important examples of this alleged interference are that Plati caused Smith to be detained and ticketed for allegedly trespassing in a University hallway; that Plati “denied to Claimant Smith resources of the Office of Athletic Media Relations routinely given to other media and to other fans of the University”; and that Plati “denied Plaintiff Smith and Netbuffs.com treatment as ‘media’ or ‘press.’” Smith also alleges that Plati prevented Smith from talking to coaches, excluded him from football practices, required him formally to request and pay for materials given freely to the public, and kept him from distributing Net-buffs.com advertisements at a University athletic event. 2
B. Procedural History
Smith filed this action in Boulder County District Court in February 1999, asserting both state and federal (42 U.S.C. § 1983) claims. He moved the state court for leave to depose Plati before entry of a case mаnagement order. The state court granted the motion and the order was to be entered March 12, 1999. Appellees, however, removed the case to federal district court on March 11, 1999, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1441. Plati also filed a motion for a stay of litigation to prevent discovery on any issues other than those relating to Plati’s claim of qualified immunity. On April 20, 1999, the federal district court *1173 limited Smith’s discovery accordingly. Two days later, on April 22, 1999, Smith commenced a “virtually identical state court action in the Boulder District Court (No. 99 CV 0677), omitting any federal claims so that the new action could not be removed.”
Upon discovering the parallel state action, the federal district court ordered Smith to dismiss it. Smith complied, but contends on appeal that the district court’s order was erroneous.
In March 1999, the University and Plati filed a motion to dismiss under Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1) (lack of subject matter jurisdiction) and 12(b)(6) (failure to state a claim).
See Smith v. Plati
C. Issues on Appeal
As interpreted by the district court, Smith’s second amended complaint makes five claims. First, Smith alleges that Plati and the University violated the Colorado Open Records Act,
see
Colo.Rev. Stat. § 24-72-204, by not producing and permitting Smith to inspect various University documents. Smith failed to raise this issue on appeal and thus we deem it waived.
See State Farm Fire & Cas. Co. v. Mhoon,
Finally, on appeal Smith asserts that the district court erred when it ordered him to dismiss the parallel state action.
JURISDICTION AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW
A. Jurisdiction
Smith filed this action in state court asserting one federal (42 U.S.C. § 1983) and two state claims. Appellees rеmoved it to federal court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1441. The district court had federal question jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1331 and supplemental jurisdiction over the state law claims under 28 U.S.C. *1174 § 1367(a). We exercise jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
B. Standard of Review
We review de novo a district court’s dismissal under Rule 12(b)(1) and 12(b)(6).
See U.S. West, Inc. v. Tristani,
Smith is a lawyer proceeding pro se. While we are generally obliged to construe pro se pleadings liberally,
see Haines v. Kerner,
DISCUSSION
A. False Arrest Claim
To state a claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for false arrest, Smith must allege two elеments:
First, the plaintiff must prove that the defendant has deprived him of a right secured by the “Constitution and laws” of the United States. Second, the plaintiff must show that the defendant deprived him of this constitutional right “under color of any statute, ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage, of any State or Territory.” This second element requires that the plaintiff show that the defendant acted “under color of law.”
Adickes v. S.H. Kress & Co.,
The cases recognize that evaluations of rights and duties under § 1983 ... arising as they do under the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, are often different from counterpart common law actions which arise under state substantive law. This is not to say that at times the same set of facts will not give rise to remedies under both § 1983 and the state law of torts. The differences are ... in terms of not only the rеquisite elements under § 1983, but also in the gravity of the right which has been invaded. For example, under state common law ... the slightest interference with personal liberty is a false imprisonment. It does not follow that all such invasions however trivial or frivolous serve to activate remedies under the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment....
*1175 Wells v. Ward, 470 F.2d 1185, 1187 (10th Cir.1972). In Wells,
[w]e refused to find a cause of action under § 1983 ... where a student being ticketed for a traffic violation attempted to drive his car away and refused to sign a ticket. He was takеn into custody, handcuffed, transported ten miles to a Justice of the Peace, not allowed to make bond on an American Automobile Association bond card, and kept in a cell for a period in excess of one hour. The [Wells ] court stated that “in the final analysis this incident falls short, not only because the officers acted in accordance with local law requiring that a violator be arrested when he fails to sign the ticket, but also because the case is insubstantial.”
Lessman v. McCormick,
Similarly, in Lessman, plaintiff alleged that the mayor оf Topeka, a bank, the police chief, and a police officer conspired to arrest her on a warrant alleging that she had failed to pay a parking ticket. See id. at 607. Plaintiff asserted that she was arrested, taken to the police station, and imprisoned until she paid the parking ticket. See id. Even after she paid the ticket, she stated that she was held until a bank employee appeared and told her the bank had prevailed upon the city to arrest and imprison her because she had failed to respond to the bank’s letters regarding her indebtedness. See id.
The Lessman court noted, “No specific facts were alleged with respect to any defendants other than White [the police officer] and Reynolds [the bank employee], except that they ‘arranged to have the defendant, White, arrest plaintiff,’ and that they conspired to deprive plaintiff of her rights.” Id. The district court dismissed the § 1983 claim for failure to state a cause of action. This court reversed, saying the issue was “close to the line of being an insubstantial deprivation of liberty, but without the development of facts we cannot say that it is, at least as to White and Reynolds.” Id. at 611.
This case, in contrast, is not “close to the line.” In his complaint, Smith mentions false arrest only twice, in paragraphs twelve (“[W]ithout legal or factual justification of any kind, Defendant Plati caused Plaintiff Smith to be arrested for ‘trespassing’ in a public place in the University’s Office of Media Relations.”) and seventeen (“Those damages specifically include ... those attributable to his own work, incurred by Plaintiff Smith in resрonse to the arrest and order of exclusion caused by Plati.”). These two references are not sufficient to sustain the requirements for an unconstitutional detention under § 1983. They are far sparser and more conclusory than those made in Less-man, where this court said the allegations were “close,” yet ultimately sufficient to withstand dismissal. For example, Smith did not allege that he had been detained for a substantial period of time, handcuffed or otherwise restrained, physically assaulted by an officer, or confined in a jail or other room. 7 Even granting Smith’s assertion, as we must on appeal from a motion to dismiss, that he was “arrested,” we believe Smith has not alleged enough facts to state a § 1983 claim for deprivation of liberty in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment. 8
*1176
Furthermore, and in contrast to
Less-man,
we have affirmed a district court’s dismissal under 12(b)(6) for failure to state a § 1983 claim for retaliation against a plaintiffs freedom of speech in a case where the factual allegations were as sparse as Smith’s.
See Eames v. City of Logan,
While in this case, the district court did not specifically advise Smith that his false arrest claim was conelusory, we do not read
Eames
as imposing an advisement requirement, particularly where Smith has already filed two amended complaints. Rather, like
Lessman,
it stands for the proposition that plaintiffs must allege sufficient facts to support their § 1983 clаims. Bare conclusions, even read in the light most favorable to plaintiff, may prove insufficient. “The existence of the § 1983 remedy does not require that federal courts entertain all suits in which unconstitutional deprivations are asserted. A federal constitutional question must exist ‘not in mere form, but in substance, and not in mere assertion, but in essence and effect.’ ”
Wells,
The district court dismissed Smith’s false arrest claim partially on the ground that the University officer made an independent evaluation before stopping and citing Smith.
See Smith,
We nevertheless affirm the district court’s dismissal of Smith’s § 1983 “false arrest” claim on the ground that he failed to allege sufficient facts tо support the pleading requirements for an unconstitutional detention.
Cf. Sandoval,
B. Retaliation
“Any form of official retaliation for exercising one’s freedom of speech, including prosecution, threatened prosecution, bad faith investigation, and legal harassment, constitutes an infringement of that freedom.”
Worrell v. Henry,
Smith’s claim satisfies the first element, for publishing Netbuffs.com is undoubtedly an activity protected by the First Amendment. For purposes of this appeal we will assume without deciding that his claim satisfies the third element, as well. Nevertheless, it founders on the second element. Plati’s actions did not cause Smith to suffer an injury that would chill a person of ordinary firmness from continuing to publish an internet site. Plati’s actions may have made it more difficult to obtain some infоrmation regarding the University’s varsity athletic programs, but alternative avenues to information remained open. In addition, Plati did nothing to affect an ordinary person’s ability to actually maintain a website. Plati neither prevented such private websites nor did he have the power to do so. 9
The district court in this case recognized this when it wrote, “Smith continues to possess the ability to publish anything any citizen could by opening a privately operated website.... At all times, Smith retained, and still retains, the ability to speak freely about any political, social or other concern related to the University of Colorado athletic programs.”
Smith,
Because it would be unjust to allow a defendant to escape liability for a First Amendment violation merely because an unusually determined plaintiff persists in his protected activity, we conclude that the proper inquiry asks “whether an official’s acts would chill or silence a person of ordinary firmnеss from future First Amendment activities.”
Mendocino Envtl. Ctr.,
In any event, we conclude the district court was correct to dismiss this claim and we affirm.
C. First Amendment Right of “News-gathering”
Smith alleges that there is “some sort of right to newsgathering” protected by the First Amendment, which Plati and the University violated by declining to provide him certain information about its varsity athletic programs. See Opening Brief at 38. We disagree.
*1178
It is well-settled that there is no general First Amendment right of access to all sources of information within governmental control.
See Houchins v. KQED, Inc.,
Smith does nоt point to any Supreme Court or Tenth Circuit precedent establishing the right of access he seeks. Smith’s citation to
Branzburg
is not to the contrary. In
Branzburg,
the Supreme Court remarked that “without some protection for seeking out the news, freedom of the press could be eviscerated,”
Therefore, we conclude that Smith has not demonstrated that his alleged right of access to University athletic information exists, as a member of either the public or the press. Thus, the district court’s dismissal of this claim was proper.
D. Claim for Mandamus for Violation of First Amendment Right of Equal Access
Smith seeks an order of mandamus under Colorado Rule of Civil Procedure 106(a)(2) requiring Plati to give Smith equal access to all information given to other mеmbers of the press. (See Complaint ¶¶ 19-22.) Smith grounds his claim for mandamus relief on the assertion that there is “some sort of protection against arbitrary and even malicious giving of access to some but denial to others.”
In considering whether to issue a writ of mandamus, Colorado courts have generally applied a three-part test: (1) a plaintiff must have a clear right to the relief sought; (2) the defendant must have a clear duty to perform the act re
*1179
quested; and (3) there must be no other available remedy.
See Sherman v. City of Colorado Springs Planning Comm’n,
It is clear that under Colorado law mandamus does not he to compel Plati to treat Smith like ah other members of the media. Plati’s job requires him to make on-going decisions regarding what University athletic information is made public, given to the press, or kept confidential— and every variety of decision in between— under constantly changing circumstances. Smith asks this court to control and regulate the general course of Plati’s official conduct as Assistant Athletic Director for Media Relations for a long series of continuous acts performed under varying conditions. Mandamus is not appropriate in this case becаuse it would require a court constantly to be looking over Plati’s shoulder and assessing whether, for instance, after consulting with the football coach and the athletic director, Plati’s decision to permit five media photographers to set up their cameras on the sidehnes during a home football game meant Plati had to grant sidelines access to Smith as well.
Therefore, while on a different ground than the district court, we affirm the dismissal of this claim.
Cf. Sandoval,
E. Anti-Injunction Act
Smith objects that the district court erred when it ordered him to dismiss the state сourt action which asserted virtually identical claims. Given that we affirm the dismissal of Smith’s substantive claims, we hold that the issue is moot. An issue becomes moot when it becomes impossible for the court to grant “any effectual relief whatsoever” on that issue to a prevailing party.
See Church of Scientology v. United States,
Smith had an opportunity to fully and fairly litigate the state law claims in federal district court and to raise those issues on appeal. Those claims are now disposed of and any subsequent litigation would be barred by res judicata.
See Cromwell v. County of Sac,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s dismissal of Smith’s claims. We also DISMISS as moot Smith’s allegation that the district court erred when it ordered Smith to dismiss his parallel state court action.
Notes
. Smith's claims against the University and Plati in his official capacity raise Eleventh Amendment issues.
See Buchwald v. Univ. of N.M. Sch. of Med.,
. In general, when reviewing a motion to dismiss, a court examines only the allegations made
in the complaint. See Sutton v. Utah State Sch. for the Deaf & Blind,
. At oral argument, Smith’s counsel conceded that, on appeal, Smith had abandoned his claims against the University. Thus, we consider only thе remaining claims against Plati in his official and individual capacities.
. The district court noted, and we agree, that “Smith does not specify the subsection [of Rule 106] under which he seeks relief, but the only one having a conceivable relevance is Rule 106(a)(2).”
Smith,
. In his complaint, Smith styles Plati’s actions as violating "the Constitutions of the United States of America and State of Colorado.” (Complaint ¶21.) To the district court and on appeal, however, Smith rested this claim exclusively on the Speech and Press Clauses of the First Amendment tо the federal Constitution. Therefore, we characterize it as such.
See Phillips v. Calhoun,
. Even when a complaint is construed liberally, this court has dismissed pro se complaints for failure to allege sufficient facts.
Hall v. Bellman,
. At oral argument, Smith's counsel admitted that Smith had been only stopped and given citations by a University officer.
. Smith's declaration that he was issued a citation that banned him from the University's Boulder campus for one year does not support his § 1983 unlawful detention claim. We have found no cases, and Smith did not cite any to us, in which a court found that exclusion from an area supported a claim of unlawful detention.
. Smith makes much out of Plati's “attempts” and “threats” but allegеs little concrete, retaliatory action. For instance, Smith alleges that Plati
attempted
to induce Smith's attorney not to represent him and
attempted
to interfere with Netbuffs.com by
threatening
to copyright athletic information. Smith, however, fails to allege enough context to show why these preliminary (and apparently unsuccessful) actions would chill a person of ordinary firmness. For example, perhaps Plati had a legal right to copyright the varsity sports schedules; Smith never alleges he did not. In the same vein, while Smith alleges that Plati had him excluded from football practices, he does not allege that he had а right to attend football practices. While it is true that when reviewing a motion to dismiss we must accept a plaintiff's allegations as true and view them in the light most favorable to the plaintiff,
see Sutton,
. The Supreme Court has recognized that the First Amendment guarantees access to government records pertaining to criminal proceedings if (1) thеre has been a tradition of access to the information and (2) public access benefits the functioning of the particular process in question.
See, e.g., Press-Enter. Co. v. Superior Court (Press Enterprise II),
. Indeed, Smith concedes that this issue has now become moot: “Plaintiff Smith should have been allowed to continue with his state court action, and he should now be allowed to continue the action the court below told him he could bring in the state courts even when, if Smith prevails in any way on this appeal, the court below once again regains jurisdiction of this case upon remand (Opening Brief at 63 (emphasis added).) Since we have affirmed the district court's dismissal on all claims, Smith has not "prevailed] in any way on this appeal.”
