Edward Nero v. Marilyn Mosby
Opinion of the Court
Freddie Gray, Jr., suffered fatal injuries while handcuffed and shackled in the custody of the Baltimore City Police Department. The Baltimore State's Attorney's Office, led by State's Attorney Marilyn Mosby, conducted an investigation into Gray's death. After the State Medical Examiner ruled Gray's death a homicide, Major Samuel Cogen of the Baltimore City Sheriff's Office criminally charged six of the police officers involved in Gray's arrest and detention. The same day, State's Attorney Mosby announced the charges and read the supporting probable-cause statement to the public at a press conference.
A grand jury subsequently indicted the officers on substantially similar counts, but ultimately, none was convicted.
Five of the charged officers-Officer Edward Michael Nero, Officer Garrett Edward Miller, Lieutenant Brian Scott Rice, Officer William Porter, and Sergeant Alicia White ("Officers")
I.
A.
Because this appeal comes to us at the motion-to-dismiss stage, we recount the facts as alleged by the Officers and must accept them as true for purposes of this appeal.
See
Jackson v. Lightsey
,
The morning of April 12, 2015, Lieutenant Rice encountered Freddie Gray, Jr., and another person walking along North Avenue in Baltimore City. After making eye contact with Rice, Gray and his companion ran. Rice pursued them and called for backup. Officers Miller and Nero responded; Miller chased Gray, and Nero chased Gray's companion. While pursuing Gray, Miller yelled that he had a taser and instructed Gray to get on the ground. Gray voluntarily surrendered with his hands up. Miller brought him to the ground and handcuffed him in a prone position. When Miller searched Gray, he found a knife and informed Gray that he was under arrest.
A police van arrived to transport Gray to the police station. Nero, who had failed to apprehend Gray's companion, and another officer placed Gray inside. Because a crowd of citizens was forming, the van and the officers-including Rice, Miller, Nero, and Officer Porter, who had arrived on the scene-reconvened one block south to complete the paperwork for Gray's arrest. At this second stop, Rice and Miller removed Gray from the van, replaced his handcuffs with flex cuffs, shackled his legs, and placed him back in the van. The van departed, and the officers returned to their patrol duties.
Shortly thereafter, Porter received a call from the van driver requesting assistance at another location several blocks away. Porter met the van at this third location, assisted the driver with opening the van's rear doors, and observed Gray lying prone on the floor of the van. Gray asked for medical assistance. Porter informed the driver that Gray should be taken to the hospital, and then he left.
Meanwhile, Miller and Nero returned to North Avenue, where they arrested another person and called for a police van and additional units. The van carrying Gray responded to this fourth location, as did Porter and Sergeant White, who had already "received supervisor complaints" about Gray's arrest. J.A. 169. The second arrestee was placed in the van. Gray again communicated to Porter that he wanted medical assistance. White separately attempted to speak with Gray, but Gray did not respond. Porter and White returned to their vehicles and followed the van to the Western District police station.
At the police station, Gray was found unconscious in the back of the van. An officer rendered emergency assistance, and Porter called a medic. White confirmed that a medic was en route. Gray was taken to the University of Maryland Shock Trauma Unit, where he died due to a neck injury on April 19, 2015. The State Medical Examiner ruled Gray's death a homicide.
On May 1, 2015, Major Cogen executed an application for Statement of Charges for each of the five Officers, plus the driver of the van. Each application contained the same affidavit, sworn by Major Cogen, reciting the facts supporting probable cause. The affidavit explained that Rice, Miller, and Nero illegally arrested Gray without probable cause because the knife found on him was legal: "The blade of the knife was folded into the handle. The knife was not a switchblade knife and is lawful under Maryland law." J.A. 35. The affidavit further stated that the officers repeatedly failed to seatbelt Gray in the back of the van, contrary to a Baltimore City Police Department General Order. It noted that Porter observed Gray on the floor of the van, but "[d]espite Mr. Gray's seriously deteriorating medical condition, no medical assistance was rendered to or summonsed for Mr. Gray at that time." J.A. 37. And, the affidavit asserted, "White, who was responsible for investigating two citizen complaints pertaining to Mr. Gray's illegal arrest, spoke to the back of Mr. Gray's head. When he did not respond, she did nothing further despite the fact that she was advised that he needed a medic. She made no effort to look, assess or determine his condition." J.A. 37.
A Maryland district court commissioner approved the applications and issued warrants for the Officers' arrests. Nero and Miller were each charged with two counts of assault in the second degree, two counts of misconduct in office, and false imprisonment. Rice was charged with manslaughter, two counts of assault in the second degree, two counts of misconduct in office, and false imprisonment. Porter and White were each charged with manslaughter, assault in the second degree, and misconduct in office.
Later that day, State's Attorney Mosby held a press conference to announce the charges and call for an end to the riots that had erupted in Baltimore following Gray's death. She told the public, "The findings of our comprehensive, thorough and independent investigation, coupled with the medical examiner's determination that Mr. Gray's death was a homicide ... has led us to believe that we have probable cause to file criminal charges." J.A. 29. She then read the full statement of probable cause verbatim.
During the press conference, Mosby emphasized that she and her office independently investigated Gray's death:
It is my job to examine and investigate the evidence of each case and apply those facts to the elements of a crime, in order to make a determination as to whether individuals should be prosecuted.... [I]t is precisely what I did in the case of Freddie Gray.
Once alerted about this incident on April 13, investigators from my police integrity unit were deployed to investigate the circumstances surrounding Mr. Gray's apprehension.... [M]y team worked around the clock; 12 and 14 hour days to canvas and interview dozens of witnesses; view numerous hours of video footage; repeatedly reviewed and listened to hours of police video tape statements; surveyed the route, reviewed voluminous medical records; and we leveraged the information made available by the police department, the community and family of Mr. Gray.
J.A. 29. Mosby concluded her speech by calling for peace in Baltimore as she moved forward with the charges:
To the people of Baltimore and the demonstrators across America: I heard your call for 'No justice, no peace.' Your peace is sincerely needed as I work to deliver justice on behalf of this young man....
[T]o the youth of the city[,] I will seek justice on your behalf. This is a moment. This is your moment. Let's insure we have peaceful and productive rallies that will develop structural and systemic changes for generations to come. You're at the forefront of this cause and as young people, our time is now.
J.A. 32-33.
On May 21, 2015, a grand jury indicted all six officers on charges substantially similar to those listed in the Statements of Charges. Porter was tried before a jury, and after the jury could not reach a unanimous verdict, the judge declared a mistrial. Nero and Rice underwent bench trials, and the judge ultimately found them not guilty on all counts. Thereafter, Mosby dismissed all outstanding charges against Miller, White, and Porter.
B.
While the criminal charges against all of the Officers were still pending, the Officers sued State's Attorney Mosby. The Officers claimed that she violated their rights by bringing charges without probable cause and defamed the Officers by making false accusations against them at the May 1, 2015 press conference.
Mosby moved to dismiss the Officers' claims, asserting various immunities. She asserted absolute prosecutorial immunity, or alternatively qualified immunity, for the § 1983 malicious-prosecution claim; absolute prosecutorial immunity under Maryland common law and statutory immunity under the Maryland Tort Claims Act (MTCA) for the state malicious-prosecution claims; and MTCA immunity and common-law public-official immunity for the defamation and false-light claims. Mosby further argued that the Officers failed to state claims on which relief could be granted.
After a hearing, the district court allowed the three malicious-prosecution claims, the defamation claim, and the false-light claim to proceed.
Nero v. Mosby
,
Mosby timely appealed. She challenges the district court's denial of immunity for the § 1983 malicious-prosecution claim, the denial of immunity for the state malicious-prosecution claims, and the failure to grant immunity for the defamation and false-light claims. We address each challenge in turn.
II.
We begin with the Officers' § 1983 malicious-prosecution claim and State's Attorney Mosby's assertion of absolute prosecutorial immunity. We have jurisdiction to review the district court's denial of absolute immunity for this claim pursuant to
A.
Absolute immunity protects "the vigorous and fearless performance of the prosecutor's duty" that is so essential to a fair, impartial criminal justice system.
Imbler v. Pachtman
,
The protection that absolute immunity affords "is not grounded in any special 'esteem for those who perform [prosecutorial] functions, and certainly not from a desire to shield abuses of office.' "
Kalina v. Fletcher
,
Because absolute immunity safeguards the process, not the person, it extends only to actions "intimately associated with the judicial phase of the criminal process."
Imbler
,
In applying this functional approach, the Supreme Court has distinguished between advocative functions and investigative or administrative functions, holding that the former enjoy absolute immunity but the latter do not.
See
Kalina
,
B.
Mosby's alleged wrongs fall squarely under the umbrella of absolute immunity. Mosby correctly argued that the specific conduct the Officers challenge was within her role as an advocate. Therefore, the district court should have dismissed the § 1983 malicious-prosecution claim.
1.
The gravamen of the Officers' complaints is that Mosby and her office conducted an investigation into Gray's death, and despite finding no evidence of criminal wrongdoing, Mosby either instructed Cogen to file false charges or erroneously advised him that probable cause supported the charges. The Officers contend that Mosby brought charges against them "for the purpose of stopping the riots rather than prosecuting charges supported by probable cause." J.A. 183.
The Officers also allege that Mosby misrepresented facts in the applications for Statement of Charges that Cogen executed and filed. They claim that Mosby included false information-e.g., that the knife found on Gray was legal, that the Officers' failure to seatbelt Gray was a crime, and that the Officers were aware Gray was in medical distress prior to arriving at the police station. And they claim that she omitted key facts-e.g., that the second arrestee placed in the police van reported Gray was conscious and banging his head against the wall, that another officer observed Gray was not in medical distress, and that the medics who examined Gray at the police station reported his neck was normal.
At bottom, the Officers take issue with Mosby's decision to prosecute them and her role in preparing the charging documents.
2.
These claims are barred by settled Supreme Court and circuit precedent. In
Kalina
, the Supreme Court held that a prosecutor's "selection of the particular facts to include in the certification" of probable cause, "her drafting of the certification, her determination that the evidence was sufficiently strong to justify a probable-cause finding, her decision to file charges, and her presentation of the information" to the court are all entitled to absolute immunity.
We see no material difference between the conduct protected in
Kalina
and
Springmen
and the acts the Officers allege here. Mosby's assessment of the evidence-the knife, the failure to seatbelt Gray, information regarding what the Officers knew about Gray's medical condition before finding him unconscious-and her conclusion that it supported probable cause mirror the prosecutor's "determination" in
Kalina
"that the evidence was sufficiently strong to justify a probable-cause finding."
See
We reject the argument, as we did in
Springmen
, that providing legal advice to police is never entitled to absolute immunity.
See
We also reject the Officers' argument that Mosby's involvement in the investigation of Gray's death strips her of absolute
immunity. Certainly, prosecutors enjoy only qualified immunity for their actions before securing probable cause for an arrest.
Buckley
,
To the extent the Officers ask us to create a new rule that participation in an investigation deprives a prosecutor's subsequent acts of absolute immunity, we balk at the proposition. Such a rule would not only upend the functional approach that the Supreme Court has articulated and applied for decades,
see
Buckley
,
For the foregoing reasons, Mosby's absolute-immunity defense plainly defeats the Officers' § 1983 claim. Holding otherwise would require us to rewrite the doctrine of absolute prosecutorial immunity. This we will not do.
III.
Having determined that State's Attorney Mosby is entitled to absolute immunity for the Officers' § 1983 claim, we turn to the Officers' state malicious-prosecution claims, brought under the Maryland Declaration of Rights and Maryland common law. Mosby asserted Maryland common-law absolute prosecutorial immunity and MTCA immunity, but the district court denied both defenses.
Nero
,
A.
Our jurisdiction is limited to appeals "from final decisions of the district courts."
Orders denying immunity often fall within the collateral order doctrine.
See, e.g.
,
Mitchell v. Forsyth
,
Here, Maryland law indicates that the state's common-law absolute prosecutorial immunity confers a right to be free from litigation. In
Gill v. Ripley
, the Maryland Court of Appeals adopted the U.S. Supreme Court's rule that prosecutors enjoy absolute immunity in suits for conduct intimately related to the judicial process.
For these reasons, before
Gill
was decided, the Supreme Court had deemed absolute
prosecutorial immunity a "complete protection from suit."
Harlow v. Fitzgerald
,
We recognize that the denial of absolute prosecutorial immunity would not be immediately appealable under Maryland's collateral order doctrine.
See
Md. Bd. of Physicians v. Geier
,
In arguing otherwise, the Officers rely on the Court of Appeals' opinion in
Dawkins
. But
Dawkins
dealt with Maryland's procedural rules-not the substantive right that absolute prosecutorial immunity confers.
See
The collateral order doctrine strikes a balance between courts' interest in protecting government officials entitled to immunity from burdensome litigation and the competing interest in not overburdening appellate courts with piecemeal appeals.
See
Will v. Hallock
,
Even if absolute prosecutorial immunity could be construed under Maryland law as merely an immunity from liability, and thus outside the scope of the collateral order doctrine, we would still have pendent appellate jurisdiction here. Pendent appellate jurisdiction permits appellate courts to "retain the discretion to review issues that are not otherwise subject to immediate appeal when such issues are so interconnected with immediately appealable issues that they warrant concurrent review."
Rux v. Republic of Sudan
,
In sum, we have jurisdiction to review the district court's denial of Mosby's claimed absolute-immunity defense to the state malicious-prosecution claims both under the federal collateral order doctrine and via our pendent appellate jurisdiction.
B.
In Part II.B, we held that Mosby is entitled to absolute prosecutorial immunity for the Officers' § 1983 malicious-prosecution claim under federal common law. Because the Officers' § 1983 malicious-prosecution claim and their state malicious-prosecution claims rest on the same facts, and absolute prosecutorial immunity is the same under federal law and Maryland law, we also hold that Mosby is entitled to absolute prosecutorial immunity for the Officers' state malicious-prosecution claims under Maryland common law.
IV.
Finally, we address the Officers' state-law defamation and false-light claims, which arise from Mosby's press-conference statements. As a defense to these claims, Mosby asserted statutory immunity under the MTCA and public-official immunity under Maryland common law. The district court declined to dismiss the press-conference torts, finding that the Officers had alleged sufficient facts to state plausible claims for relief and that Mosby was not entitled to the fair reporting or fair comment privileges.
Nero
,
A.
Under the collateral order doctrine, we have jurisdiction to review the district court's order denying Mosby's motion to dismiss the defamation and false-light claims if the order denies an immunity from suit and thereby "conclusively determines" the immunity question.
See
Gray-Hopkins
,
1.
Maryland's legislature has made clear that the MTCA confers a right to be free from suit. The MTCA provides in relevant part that "State personnel," including State's Attorneys, "are
immune from suit
in courts of the State and from liability in tort for a tortious act or omission that is within the scope of the public duties of the State personnel and is made without malice or gross negligence."
Indeed, the statute's mention of both immunity from suit and immunity from liability requires us to conclude that it confers both a right to be free from suit and a right to be free from liability. "When we interpret statutes, we must 'construe all parts to have meaning' " and "avoid interpretations that would turn some statutory terms into nothing more than surplusage."
United States v. Briley
,
To be sure, Maryland's Court of Appeals has stated that "interlocutory trial court orders rejecting defenses of ... statutory immunity ... are not appealable under the Maryland collateral order doctrine."
Dawkins
,
2.
Because MTCA immunity protects Maryland State's Attorneys from suit, the district court's decision to allow the Officers' defamation and false-light claims to go forward conclusively determined that Mosby was not entitled to MTCA immunity. Permitting a suit to proceed beyond the dismissal stage in spite of an immunity defense "subjects the official to the burdens of pretrial matters, and some of the rights inherent in [the] immunity defense are lost."
Jenkins v. Medford
,
B.
Satisfied that we have jurisdiction to review the district court's ruling on the press-conference torts, we turn to the merits of Mosby's MTCA-immunity claim. The Officers allege that, at the press conference, Mosby defamed them and invaded their privacy by placing them before the public in a false light. The MTCA bars these claims if Mosby's press-conference statements were "within the scope of [her] public duties" and "made without malice or gross negligence."
1.
At least two of the Officers allege, somewhat confusingly, that by holding the press conference and reading the statement of probable cause, Mosby acted both within the scope of her employment and outside it. Compare J.A. 185 ("At all times, Defendants Mosby and Cogen were acting ... within the scope of their employment[.]"), with J.A. 188 ("Defendant Mosby went outside the scope of her employment as a State's Attorney by holding a press conference, acting in an investigative capacity, [and] reading the statement of charges to the public[.]"). We agree with the former assertion.
The MTCA's within-the-scope-of-employment requirement "is coextensive with the common law concept of 'scope of employment' under the doctrine of respondeat superior."
Larsen v. Chinwuba
,
The Maryland Court of Appeals has held that the head of an executive agency acts within the scope of her employment when she shares with the public information about the agency's activities to further the agency's mandate. In
Chinwuba
, the Commissioner of the Maryland Insurance Administration, while conducting an investigation into a Maryland health maintenance organization (HMO), allegedly disclosed to the press letters he had sent to the HMO and made statements to the press about the investigation.
Chinwuba II
,
Applying these principles here, Mosby's press-conference statements clearly fell within the scope of her employment. As Baltimore City's State's Attorney, Mosby was elected by the people of Baltimore to lead the city's State's Attorney's Office, a key agency in Maryland's state government.
See
Md. Const., Art. 5, § 7. The State's Attorney's Office houses Baltimore's Police Integrity Unit and prosecutes crimes on behalf of the public.
See
The Officers allege that Mosby used their arrests "for her own personal interests and political agendas" and thus acted outside the scope of her employment. Appellees' Br. 42 (internal quotation marks omitted). But their argument is entirely devoid of support. The statements they cite-"I heard your call for 'No justice, no peace,' " "your peace is sincerely needed as I work to deliver justice," and "I will seek justice on your behalf"-simply do not give rise to a reasonable inference that Mosby acted for reasons other than furthering the operations of the State's Attorney's Office.
See
2.
The Officers further assert that Mosby is not entitled to MTCA immunity because she made the press-conference statements with either malice or gross negligence. But the allegations in the complaints simply cannot sustain such a finding.
For MTCA purposes, malice is "conduct characterized by evil or wrongful motive, intent to injure, knowing and deliberate wrongdoing, ill-will or fraud."
Barbre
,
Nothing in the complaints even suggests that Mosby spoke at the press conference out of "hate" or "to deliberately and willfully injure" the Officers.
See
Gross negligence is "an intentional failure to perform a manifest duty in reckless disregard of the consequences as
affecting the life or property of another,"
Cooper v.Rodriguez
,
The only statements that the Officers challenge as tortious are those Mosby read from the application for Statement of Charges. Specifically, the Officers allege that Mosby intentionally included false facts and omitted material facts in the application such that when she read it to the public at the press conference, she knowingly publicized inaccurate and defamatory information about them. Maryland courts have not directly addressed the necessary showing for gross negligence in the defamation or false-light context. But, given that gross negligence turns on "reckless disregard of the consequences" of one's actions,
see
Cooper
,
This standard is a familiar one. It echoes the first prong of the
Franks
test, which provides that a criminal defendant cannot challenge a probable-cause affidavit, such as the application for Statement of Charges, unless he shows that the affiant "knowingly and intentionally, or with reckless disregard for the truth," included "a false statement."
See
Franks v. Delaware
,
We have said that an allegedly false statement in a probable-cause affidavit amounts to "reckless disregard" if the drafter made the statement "with a high degree of awareness of [its] probable falsity."
Miller v. Prince George's County
,
But the Officers offer no facts to support their assertion that Mosby knew that any of her statements were false or seriously doubted their veracity.
See
Miller
,
With regard to omissions in a probable-cause statement, we have said that a drafter acts with reckless disregard when she "fail[s] to inform the judicial officer of facts [she] knew would negate probable cause"-i.e., material facts.
Miller
,
But these facts do not negate probable cause, let alone establish that the Officers had no knowledge of Gray's condition. Probable cause is "a probability or substantial chance of criminal activity, not an actual showing of such activity," and it is assessed based on the totality of the circumstances.
Illinois v. Gates
,
With this background in mind, we do not see how the Officers' proffered facts preclude "a probability or substantial chance" the Officers knew Gray needed medical attention and failed to act.
See
Gates
,
And, importantly, Mosby was "not required to include every piece of exculpatory information" in the application for Statement of Charges.
See
Evans v. Chalmers
,
Accordingly, the Officers' allegations cannot support a finding of gross negligence. Although questions of gross negligence are typically for the factfinder to decide,
Barbre
,
V.
In conclusion, none of the Officers' claims can survive the motion-to-dismiss stage. That the Officers disagree with Mosby's decision to prosecute-as most defendants do-or with the information in the application for Statement of Charges-which inherently contains defamatory information-does not entitle them to litigate their disagreement in court, and much less recover damages.
The Officers' malicious-prosecution claims epitomize the "vexatious litigation" that absolute prosecutorial immunity is designed to preclude.
See
Pachaly v. City of Lynchburg
,
The Officers' defamation and false-light claims are equally bereft of support. The Officers cite no facts showing that Mosby spoke at the press conference with malice or gross negligence, as required by the MTCA. Their allegations, accepted as true, do not even negate that Mosby had probable cause to charge them. And the Officers' contention that Mosby acted outside the scope of her employment by telling the public that she would pursue justice borders on absurd.
Perhaps to the Officers' chagrin, they must accept that they are subject to the same laws as every other defendant who has been prosecuted and acquitted. Those laws clearly bar the type of retaliatory suits that the Officers brought here. The district court therefore erred in allowing their claims to proceed.
REVERSED
The sixth officer charged, Officer Caesar Goodson, Jr., is not a party to this case.
The Officers also sued Major Cogen and the State of Maryland, but because neither is a party to this appeal, we need not address the claims against them here.
The complaints also alleged claims for unreasonable seizure under the Fourteenth Amendment and Article 24 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights, false arrest, false imprisonment, abuse of process, and civil conspiracy; however, the district court dismissed these counts for failure to state a claim, and the Officers do not challenge that decision on appeal.
The Officers claimed that the State's Attorney's Office "manipulated evidence to facilitate [the] indictments," J.A. 176, that "Mosby created false facts and omitted material facts," J.A. 179, and that she "conduct[ed] a bogus and sham investigation," J.A. 179. But, absent specific supporting facts, these conclusory allegations are "not entitled to be assumed true."
Ashcroft v. Iqbal
,
See
J.A. 29;
see generally
Isaac G. Lara, Note,
Shielded from Justice: How State Attorneys General Can Provide Structural Remedies to the Criminal Prosecutions of Police Officers
,
Prior to
Gill
, Maryland courts had stated in passing that "judges have an absolute privilege from suits arising out of their judicial acts," and "[p]rosecutors in judicial hearings are afforded the same privilege."
Simms v. Constantine
,
The interconnected requirement is also met where "review of [the] jurisdictionally insufficient issue is necessary to ensure meaningful review of [the] immediately appealable issue."
The Officers in fact conceded at oral argument that if the application for Statement of Charges passes the Franks test, their defamation and false-light claims fail. See Oral Argument at 46:40-47:10.
For example, the Porter-White complaint alleges that "Porter observed Freddie Gray lying on the floor of the vehicle ... in a prone position, with his feet at the rear area of the transport compartment"; Porter heard Gray say "help" and "inquired if Mr. Gray wanted to see a medic and/or if he wanted medical help," to which Gray "indicated that he did want to have medical assistance"; Porter "advised Officer Goodson that he would need to transport Mr. Gray to the hospital," but Gray was instead taken to North Avenue where the van picked up a second arrestee. J.A. 172-73. The Porter-White complaint also states that White "received supervisor complaints"; observed "Mr. Gray sitting in-between the seat and the floor of the back of the police wagon, with his head down, leaning over"; "attempted to speak with him"; received no response; "heard him making noises" and "saw him breathing"; "concluded that his non-responsiveness was due to Mr. Gray continuing to be uncooperative and non-compliant"; and "got back into her patrol car and left the scene." J.A. 169.
Concurring Opinion
I am pleased to join Chief Judge Gregory's fine opinion. It is an eloquent defense and application of neutral principles of law, no matter what the context.
I wish only to underscore my colleague's concern about the perils of appellees' defamation claim. State's Attorney Mosby is an elected official. After the death of Freddie Gray, her community, her constituents, and her city faced a crisis of confidence. Baltimore's citizens had their faith shaken, not only in the police, but in the very ability of government to administer justice. As any of us would expect of our political leaders, Mosby responded to a crisis. And as all of us should demand from our political leaders, Mosby explained her actions to the public. At a press conference, she read from a charging document, praised investigators, and explained the basis of the prosecution. To say that an elected official exposes herself to liability by discharging her democratic duty to justify the decisions she was elected to make is to elevate tort law above our most cherished constitutional ideals.
The First Amendment requires public officials, such as the police officers who brought this suit, to make a showing of "actual malice" in an action for defamation relating to their official duties.
See
New York Times v. Sullivan
,
This is not to say that a prosecutor can never face consequences for reckless public remarks. But the proper avenue for regulating prosecutorial statements is a state's ethical code governing attorneys, not private tort suits. Under Maryland's Rules of Professional Conduct, for example, a prosecutor may face discipline if he makes "extrajudicial comments that have a substantial likelihood of heightening public condemnation of the accused," or "extrajudicial statements that have a substantial likelihood of prejudicing an adjudicatory proceeding." Maryland Attorneys' Rules of Professional Conduct, Rule 19-303.8. Notably exempt from that rule, however, are those "statements that are necessary to inform the public of the nature and extent of the prosecutor's action and that serve a legitimate law enforcement purpose."
Id
. Mosby's comments were of precisely that ilk. And for similar reasons, her comments were privileged under state law.
See
Piscatelli v. Van Smith
,
The defamation action here not only attempts to dilute the protections of
New York Times v. Sullivan
. It would weaken the defense of absolute prosecutorial immunity set forth by the Supreme Court in
Imbler v. Pachtman
,
By advancing a theory of tort liability for explanations of official acts, the officers here strike at the very heart of the democratic dialogue. Courts must repel such attacks. In doing so, we honor our "profound national commitment to the principle that debate on public issues should be unlimited, robust, and wide-open" on all sides.
Sullivan
,
Defamation law unbound is inimical to free expression. I thought the principle of New York Times v. Sullivan secure. But no. As the saying goes, the censors never sleep. Here they come again.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Edward Michael NERO; Garrett Edward Miller, Plaintiffs-Appellees, v. Marilyn J. MOSBY, Defendant-Appellant, and Major Samuel Cogen, Defendant. Brian Scott Rice, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Marilyn J. Mosby, Defendant-Appellant, and Major Samuel Cogen, Defendant. Alicia White ; William Porter, Plaintiffs-Appellees, v. Marilyn J. Mosby, Defendant-Appellant, and Major Samuel Cogen; State of Maryland, Defendants.
- Cited By
- 140 cases
- Status
- Published