Willan sued county law-enforcement officers and authorities under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, claiming that they had violated his constitutional rights by obtaining and disseminating information about his criminal history. He appeals from the grant of summary judgment to the defendants.
Willan was locked in a bitter campaign in 1999 for the mayoralty of the town of Lodi, Wisconsin. His opponent, the incumbent, complained to the police that Willan was harassing her. (The record does not reveal the nature of the alleged harassment.) The police queried the computerized database maintained by the FBI’s National Crime Information Center and discovered that Willan had been convicted of the felony of burglary in Georgia in 1981. After losing the election, Willan sued the mayor for fraud. The suit was dismissed because, as the mayor reminded the court, an unpardoned felon is ineligible to run for public office in Wisconsin. Although Willan had been convicted under Georgia’s Youthful Offender Act, with the result that his civil rights (except the right to own a gun) had been restored upon completion of his sentence, the Wisconsin appellate court concluded that this was not the same as a pardon.
Willan v. Brereton,
No. 99-1816,
He argues that the querying of the FBI database was a search within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment that not being supported by probable cause was unreasonable. Records of conviction are public rather than private documents, however; the information in them is not the property of the convicted persons, and therefore the National Crime Information Center had every right, at least so far as the Constitution is concerned, to record and disseminate Willan’s conviction. The Fourth Amendment does not entitle a person to conceal the fact that he has been convicted of a crime.
Eagle v. Morgan,
Willan also argues that the disclosure of his felony conviction violated his right of privacy. In the famous case of
Melvin v. Reid,
Anyway the
Melvin
case, paternalistic in doubting the ability of people to give proper rather than excessive weight to a person’s criminal history, is dead, see, e.g.,
Rawlins v. Hutchinson Publishing Co.,
There is an even deeper objection to Willan’s privacy claim. The tort law of privacy, the law on which the plaintiff in
Melvin v. Reid
relied, is a body of state law, and Willan is claiming a violation of his federal constitutional rights. Although several provisions of the Constitution protect privacy in the sense of confidentiality, including the Fourth Amendment and the self incrimination clause of the Fifth Amendment, the only place to look for a
general
right of informational privacy would be the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment or (in this case, in which the defendants were acting under color of state rather than federal law) of the Fourteenth Amendment. Information about oneself, such as one’s criminal history, would have to be deemed a form of liberty or property, and the unjustified disclosure of such information a violation of (substantive) due process.
Paul v. Davis,
There is some case authority, though its supposed roots in
Whalen v. Roe,
Affirmed.
