In
McGee v. Estelle,
we held that a warrantless arrestee’s Sixth and Fourteenth Amendment right to counsel does not attach in Texas when he appears before a magistrate for statutory warnings if prosecutors are unaware of and uninvolved in the arrest and appearance.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
On July 15, 2002, officers of the Freder-icksburg, Texas Police Department arrested plaintiff-appellant Walter Rothgery without a warrant on suspicion of being a felon in possession of a firearm, which is a third-degree felony in Texas. The suspicion was based on a criminal background check indicating that Rothgery had been convicted of a felony in California. In fact, felony charges against Rothgery in California had been dismissed after Rothgery completed a diversionary program, and both sides agree that Rothgery did not have a felony conviction.
Under the misimpression that Rothgery had a prior felony conviction, the officers booked Rothgery into the Gillespie County Jail. Rothgery says that he requested in writing the appointment of counsel at this point, though there is no record of the request. The next morning, on July 16, Rothgery was brought before a Justice of the Peace (the “magistrate”) to be informed of the accusation against him and
*295
to be given statutory warnings under Article 15.17 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, which provides for warnings generally equivalent to those required by
Miranda v. Arizona,
The arresting officer also presented the court with an affidavit titled “Affidavit of Probable Cause.” The form document was filled in with the officer’s description of the events leading up to the arrest and recited, “I charge that heretofore, on or about the 15[th] day of July, 2002, in the County of Gillespie and the State of Texas, Defendant, Walter A. Rothgery, did then and there commit the offense of unlawful possession of a firearm by a felon — 3rd degree felony.” Based on the affidavit, the magistrate found that probable cause existed for Rothgery’s arrest, signing the document under a portion of text stating, “I hereby acknowledge I have examined the foregoing affidavit and have determined that probable cause existed for the arrest of the individual accused therein.” After the appearance, Rothgery posted a surety bond to obtain release from jail. The bond agreement between Rothgery and the bonding company states, among other details of Rothgery’s arrest, that “Rothgery stands charged by complaint duly filed in the Justice of Peace Court.”
Rothgery says that he repeatedly requested counsel in the months following his release, but no counsel was appointed. On January 17, 2003, six months after his arrest, a grand jury returned an indictment against Rothgery and he was rearrested the next day. Rothgery was brought before the magistrate again on January 19 and he again requested counsel, but no attorney was appointed. On January 23, still with no attorney, Ro-thgery was transferred to another jail due to overcrowding at the Gillespie County Jail. Finally, after Rothgery requested counsel yet again, a state district judge appointed counsel on January 23, 2003. Once appointed, Rothgery’s counsel soon obtained records establishing that Ro-thgery had not been convicted of a felony. He moved to dismiss the charges, and the motion was granted on April 30, 2003.
On July 15, 2004, Rothgery sued defendant-appellee Gillespie County under 42 *296 U.S.C. § 1988, alleging that the county-violated his Sixth and Fourteenth Amendment right to counsel by following a policy of denying appointed counsel to arrestees released from jail on bond and by failing to adequately train and monitor those involved in the appointment-of-counsel process. Rothgery’s contention is that counsel should have been appointed for him after his first appearance in the magistrate’s court on July 16, 2002, and that the mistake underlying his arrest would have been discovered had counsel been timely appointed. Gillespie County moved for summary judgment on the ground that Rothgery’s Sixth and Fourteenth Amendment right to counsel did not attach until his indictment on January 17, 2008, which marked the initiation of adversary judicial proceedings against him. The district court granted the motion on February 2, 2006, and issued a take-nothing final judgment. Rothgery appeals. 3
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review a grant of summary judgment de novo, viewing all evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party and drawing all reasonable inferences in that party’s favor.
See Crawford v. Formosa Plastics Corp.,
III. DISCUSSION
The Sixth Amendment, which is applicable to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment,
4
provides in relevant part that “[i]n all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right ... to have the Assistance of Counsel for his defence.” U.S. Const, amend. VI. This right “attaches only at or after the time that adversary judicial proceedings have been initiated ... whether by way of formal charge, preliminary hearing, indictment, information, or arraignment.”
5
Kirby v. Illinois,
Following this approach in
Lomax v. Alabama,
we instructed that “reliance should be placed on the sometimes elusive degree to which the prosecutorial forces of the state have focused on an individual.”
It is undisputed in this appeal that the relevant prosecutors were not aware of or involved in Rothgery’s arrest or appearance before the magistrate on July 16, 2002. There is also no indication that the officer who filed the probable cause affidavit at Rothgery’s appearance had any power to commit the state to prosecute without the knowledge or involvement of a prosecutor.
Compare
Tex.Code Crim. PROC. Ann. art. 2.13 (limiting the role of a police officer, in relevant part, to notifying the magistrate of an offense and arresting offenders),
with id.
art. 2.01-.02 (designating district and county attorneys as the representatives of the state in all criminal cases and proceedings);
cf. Clawson v. Wharton County,
Rothgery raises several arguments against this conclusion. First, he contends that McGee’s holding on prosecutorial in
*298
volvement is not good law, as the Supreme Court has twice found adversary judicial proceedings to have been initiated without mentioning whether prosecutors were involved.
See Michigan v. Jackson,
Rothgery also argues that McGee is inapplicable here, as the appearance before the magistrate in McGee only involved the recitation of statutory warnings, whereas Rothgery’s appearance included statutory warnings and a probable cause determination that was based on a police officer’s affidavit. Rothgery contends that the affidavit, which related the events underlying the arrest and stated that the officer “charge[d]” that Rothgery committed the offense of being a felon in possession of a firearm, constituted a “complaint” or an otherwise formal charge that initiated adversarial proceedings. 9
While only an indictment or information can formally charge a felony under Texas law,
10
see Teal v. State,
No. PD-0689-06,
However, none of those cases details the circumstances involved in the filing of the dispositive complaint or addresses an affidavit that was filed after a warrantless arrest to support a magistrate’s probable cause inquiry at an Article 15.17 warnings appearance. In fact, in similar circumstances involving a warrantless arrest, a felony complaint, and a magistrate’s probable cause determination at an Article 15.17 warnings appearance, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals chose not to decide whether the complaint initiated adversary judicial proceedings, which indicates that the relationship between a complaint and the commencement of a prosecution in Texas is less clear than Rothgery claims.
13
*300
See Green v. State,
Consequently, we are reluctant to rely on the formalistic question of whether the affidavit here would be considered a “complaint” or its functional equivalent under Texas case law and Article 15.04 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedures' — a question to which the answer is itself uncertain. 14 Instead, we must look to the specific circumstances of this case and the nature of the affidavit filed at Rothgery’s appearance before the magistrate. And the summary judgment evidence, considered in the light most favorable to Ro-thgery, fails to establish that adversary judicial proceedings were commenced by the affidavit in this case.
Thé affidavit itself indicates that it was filed for the sole purpose of establishing probable cause, as it was titled “Affidavit of Probable Cause,” it primarily consisted of the officer’s account of the events and the alleged offense, and the portion of the affidavit signed by the magistrate illustrates that the magistrate relied on the officer’s account to “determine[ ] that probable cause existed for the arrest.” The inquiry and its timing shortly after arrest were thus consistent with the probable cause determination required by
Gerstein v. Pugh,
The only aspect of the probable cause affidavit that even arguably favors Ro-thgery’s argument is its use of the word “charge” in the introductory language to the officer’s identification of the offense for which he arrested Rothgery. Yet even as a complaint, the affidavit would be insufficient to formally charge Rothgery with the felony, and there is no basis to conclude that the use of the word “charge” was, or could have been, anything but informal.
16
Cf. McGee,
Most significantly, the summary judgment evidence reflects no prosecutorial knowledge of or involvement in the arrest *301 and magistrate appearance, and Rothgery provides no reason to believe that the officer alone was empowered to commit the state to prosecute Rothgery. Indeed, it took prosecutors roughly six months after the arrest to seek an indictment against Rothgery. Without any evidence to indicate that the affidavit actually served to initiate the prosecution at the time of Ro-thgery’s magistrate appearance, we conclude that the filing of the affidavit was part of the investigatory process, serving solely to validate the arrest without committing the state to prosecute.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s order granting summary judgment to Gillespie County.
Notes
. Article 14.06 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure requires that a person arrested without a warrant be taken before a magistrate within 48 hours of arrest, at which point the magistrate must "immediately perform the duties described in Article 15.17.” Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 14.06. Article 15.17, which also applies to those who are arrested under warrant, requires that the magistrate inform the arrestee of the accusation against him, of any affidavit filed against him, and of his rights to retain counsel, to have counsel appointed for him if he cannot afford counsel, to remain silent, to have an attorney present during interviews with officers of the state, to terminate interviews at any time, and to have an examining trial to probe the existence of probable cause. Id. art. 15.17. The magistrate may also “admit the person arrested to bail if allowed by law.” Id.
. According to Rothgery, the magistrate told him that he would have to waive his right to an attorney for purposes of the appearance if he wanted to have bail set at that time, and that otherwise he would have to wait in jail until an appointment was made. On the original typed document, only the words "waive right to counsel” were underlined, and Ro-thgery says that the words "at this time” were also underlined by hand to reflect this limited waiver.
. We are indebted to the Solicitor General of Texas, Ted Cruz, who filed an amicus curiae brief in this appeal at our request, and to Professor George Dix of The University of Texas School of Law, who also filed an ami-cus curiae brief.
.
Gideon v. Wainwright,
. After the Sixth Amendment right to counsel attaches, a defendant is entitled to counsel at “critical stages” of the proceedings, absent a valid waiver.
See Michigan v. Jackson,
Gillespie County does not argue that the time between Rothgery’s release on bond and his indictment six months later did not constitute a critical stage of the prosecution, and we do not decide that issue here.
. "We look to state law to determine when adversarial proceedings against the accused have commenced,”
Felder v. McCotter,
. While the opinion did observe at one point that an Article 15.17 warnings appearance before a magistrate “does not involve counsel for the state,
nor
is it a formal charge,”
McGee,
. According to Rothgery,
United States v. Gouveia
also affirmed that prosecutorial involvement is unnecessary because it used the word "or” when observing that it had "extended an accused’s right to counsel to certain ‘critical’ pretrial proceedings ... recognizing that at those proceedings, ‘the accused [is] confronted, just as at trial, by the procedural system, or by his expert adversary, or by both."’
. Additionally, Rothgery asserts that his appearance before the magistrate commenced the prosecution because a magistrate has exclusive jurisdiction over a defendant’s case upon the filing of a felony complaint until superseded by indictment.
See Ex parte Clear,
.Complaints may serve to formally charge a misdemeanor offense in justice and municipal courts.
Huynh v. State,
. While state case law is not binding on our court with regard to the applicability of the Sixth Amendment to state procedures, state cases are nonetheless useful for determining the nature of certain state procedures.
. Despite Rothgery’s claim that
Nehman v. State,
.Green v. State
involved a Sixth Amendment claim in the context of an arrest without a warrant, the filing of a "felony complaint” with a notation indicating the setting of bail, and an appearance before a magistrate for Article 15.17 warnings and a probable cause determination.
.As Gillespie County points out, Article 15.04 falls within the "Arrest Under Warrant" chapter of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, indicating that it may only apply to affidavits offered in support of an arrest warrant. Additionally, the provision refers to “[t\he affidavit" made before the magistrate or prosecutor, Tex.Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 15.04 (emphasis added), and its use of the definite article "the” indicates that its scope may be limited to affidavits detailed elsewhere in the code. The code does not explicitly provide for an affidavit offered at a probable cause hearing for a warrantless arrestee.
In practice, however, we cannot say that Texas courts would not consider a post-war-rantless-arrest affidavit of probable cause to be an Article 15.04 complaint or its functional equivalent.
. The Court in
Gerstein
also recognized that such probable cause determinations typically are non-adversarial in nature and do not constitute "critical stages” requiring counsel.
. For similar reasons, we also do not find the use of the word "charged” on Rothgery’s bond form persuasive.
