OPINION OF THE COURT
Margaret Kelly Michaels (“Michaels”) appeals from the order granting the defendants’ motion for summary judgment and dismissing her § 1983 claims against them. Michaels alleged that the defendants violated her constitutional rights by employing coercive interview techniques with child witnesses while investigating allegations of child abuse made against her. The district court granted the defendants’ motions for summary judgment on three alternative grounds. First, the district court found that the defendants were entitled to qualified immunity because Mi-chaels’s allegations that the defendants engaged in an improper investigation did not allege a violation of her constitutional rights. The district court then ruled that
I
A child who attended the Wee Care Nursery School in Maplewood, New Jersey, reported to a nurse at his pediatrician’s office that he had been sexually abused by Michaels. Michaels was employed at the nursery school as a teacher. On April 30, 1985, Louis Fonnelaras, an investigator with the Institutional Abuse Investigation Unit of the Division of Youth and Family Services, was assigned to investigate the merits of the child’s allegation. Mr. Fonnelaras informed John Mas-troangelo, an investigator with the Essex County Prosecutor’s Office, of the child’s accusation. Mr. Mastroangelo notified Sarah Sencer-McArdle, the director of the Child Abuse Unit of the Prosecutor’s Office, of the sexual abuse report. Shortly thereafter, four other children made similar allegations regarding Michaels’s conduct. Ms. Sencer-McArdle interviewed each of the children. The evidence she discovered induced a grand jury to return an indictment against Michaels.
Following the return of the first indictment, other children reported additional allegations of sexual misconduct by Mi-chaels at the nursery school. After interviewing the children, Ms. Sencer-McArdle presented the results of her investigation to a second grand jury. The Essex County Prosecutor’s Office continued to receive reports of sexual misconduct committed against children at the Wee Care Nursery School. Ms. Sencer-McArdle presented this evidence to a third grand jury after conducting additional interviews. During the course of these investigations, Mr. Mastroangelo and George McGrath, another investigator with the Essex County Prosecutor’s Office, Susan Esquilin, a psychologist, and Mr. Fonnelaras also participated in questioning the children. A total of one hundred and sixty-three charges were filed against Michaels in three separate indictments.
On June 22, 1987, the trial regarding these charges was commenced in the Superior Court of New Jersey. On April 15, 1988, the jury convicted Michaels of 115 counts of aggravated assault, sexual assault, endangering the welfare of children, and terroristic threats. On March 26, 1993, the Appellate Division reversed the convictions and remanded for a new trial. The court questioned the reliability of the methods used to interview the children. The court held that, “courts must provide a remedy where the record demonstrates that an accuser’s testimony is founded upon unreliable perceptions, or memory caused by improper investigative procedures if it results in a defendant’s right to a fair trial being irretrievably lost .... [and that a] factual hearing would be required for this purpose.”
See State v. Michaels,
II
We review a district court’s grant of a motion for summary judgment de novo.
See Bartnicki v. Vopper,
In analyzing whether a defendant is entitled to the dismissal of an action based on the defense of qualified immunity, we must first determine “whether the plaintiffs claims make out a violation of a constitutional right.”
Assaf v. Fields,
Michaels contends that the district court erred in concluding that the defendants were entitled to qualified immunity because the interview techniques they employed did not violate her constitutional right to due process under the Fourteenth Amendment. Michaels argues that the rationale of the district court, adopted from the Seventh Circuit’s holding in
Buckley v. Fitzsimmons,
In
Buckley,
the plaintiff brought § 1983 claims against police officers for allegedly coercing witnesses, and paying them money to make false statements against him, in order to implicate him in the crime for which he was tried.
Id.
at 794. The court held in
Buckley
that “[cjoercing witnesses to speak ... is a genuine constitutional wrong” that violates “the right of the person being interrogated to be free from coercion.”
Id.
The court further held, however, that the plaintiff could not “complain that the prosecutors may have twisted [the witness’s] arm” because “[r]ights personal to their holders may not be enforced by third parties.”
Id.
at 794-95 (citations omitted). The court in
Buckley
ruled that “using one person’s coerced confession at another’s trial violates his rights under the due process clause,” but that “[p]rosecutors are entitled to absolute immunity for actions as advocates before the grand jury and at trial even if they present
Consistent with the analysis of the Seventh Circuit in Buckley, the district court in this matter held that the techniques used to interview the children during the course of the investigation did not violate Michaels’s constitutional rights. The district court decided that Ms. Sencer-McAr-dle was entitled to absolute immunity in offering the unreliable evidence.
Michaels is correct in noting that such a rule, leaves a plaintiff like herself without recourse. Indeed, the court in
Buckley
recognized this dilemma.
Michaels suggests that a but for causation analysis would be more appropriate to resolving the issue of qualified immunity in this instance. To support this proposition, Michaels cites to the dissenting opinion in
Buckley.
The dissent in
Buckley
suggested that prosecutors are not immune from liability for their non-advocacy wrongful conduct if the plaintiff can demonstrate that the indictment and trial would not have occurred but for the wrongful conduct.
We are persuaded by the reasoning set forth in the majority opinion of Buckley. While we recognize that this rule may seem harsh to plaintiffs, we are satisfied that the remedies set forth in Kulwicki for a falsely-charged defendant are sufficient to discourage prosecutors from coercing witnesses to make unreliable statements against a defendant. Here, for example, Michaels’s conviction was reversed and the serious charges against her were dismissed because the children’s testimony was unreliable.
Michaels also attempts to support her argument that her constitutional rights were violated by the improper techniques used to interview the children by relying on the decision in
Clanton v. Cooper,
The distinction between
Buckley
and
Clanton
is the use of the improperly obtained statements. In
Buckley,
the witness’s coerced testimony was presented at trial. The court held that the prosecutor was absolutely immune from an action for
The district court did not err in concluding that Michaels did not demonstrate a violation of her constitutional rights when the defendants employed improper interview techniques with the children. Thus, all of the defendants are entitled to qualified immunity for those acts. Furthermore, Ms. Sencer-McArdle is entitled to absolute immunity for offering the testimony of the children against Michaels before the grand jury and at trial.
Ill
Michaels also contends that she was denied the opportunity to discover evidence as to the proper interview techniques for interviewing children regarding allegations of sexual abuse in order to demonstrate that the defendants violated her clearly established constitutional rights. Because we conclude that the questioning of the children did not violate Michaels’s constitutional rights, we need not consider this question. Furthermore, Michaels’ final contention, that the district court erred in dismissing her malicious prosecution § 1983 claim for failure to state a claim, is also unavailing. The district court properly dismissed her claims on the basis that the remaining defendants were entitled to immunity. Any discussion in the district court’s order as to whether Michaels stated a § 1983 malicious prosecution claim was superfluous. The order granting summary judgment can be upheld without reaching the court’s alternative basis for dismissing the action.
IV
The defendants are entitled to qualified immunity for their acts in interviewing the children because Michaels did not demonstrate a violation of her own constitutional rights. Ms. Sencer-McArdle is entitled to absolute immunity for presenting the children’s testimony against Michaels before the grand jury and at trial. We therefore AFFIRM the order granting the defendants’ motion for summary judgment and dismissing Michaels’s federal claims.
