F I L E D
United States Court of Appeals
Tenth Circuit
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FEB 7 2000
TENTH CIRCUIT
PATRICK FISHER
Clerk
TENISHA WALKER,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v. Case No. 98-6457
THE CITY OF OKLAHOMA CITY; (D. C. No. CIV-97-1648-C)
SUSAN PARKER; and KFOR-TV, THE (Western District of Oklahoma)
NEW YORK TIMES, INC.,
Defendants-Appellees.
ORDER AND JUDGMENT*
Before BRORBY, McWILLIAMS, and HENRY, Circuit Judges.
The plaintiff Tenisha Walker appeals the district court’s order granting summary
judgment against her and in favor of the defendants the City of Oklahoma City, Officer
Susan Parker, and KFOR-TV, a division of the New York Times Company (“KFOR-
TV”). The district court granted summary judgment to Officer Parker and the City of
Oklahoma City on Ms. Walker’s 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claim alleging a Fourth Amendment
violation and her state law claims alleging false arrest and malicious prosecution. It also
*
This order and judgment is not binding precedent, except under the doctrines of
law of the case, res judicata, and collateral estoppel. The court generally disfavors the
citation of orders and judgments; nevertheless, an order and judgment may be cited under
the terms and conditions of 10th Cir. R. 36.3.
granted summary judgment to KFOR-TV on Ms. Walker’s defamation claim. For the
reasons set forth below, we affirm the district court’s decision.
I. BACKGROUND
Early in the morning of April 30, 1997, Officer Parker, an Oklahoma City police
officer, arrested the plaintiff Tenisha Walker (“Ms. Walker”), a Navy Seaman stationed at
Tinker Air Force base, for kidnaping, maiming, and assault with a deadly weapon.
KFOR-TV, an Oklahoma City television station, reported Ms. Walker’s arrest on
newscasts at 4:30 p.m., 5:00 p.m., and 6:00 p.m.
Shortly thereafter, Oklahoma City officials discovered that they had arrested the
wrong person. They concluded that another woman with a similar name—Tanesha
Louise Walker of Wichita, Kansas—was the proper suspect. They released the plaintiff
at approximately 10:00 p.m. on April 30, 1997.
The events leading up to Ms. Walker’s arrest began shortly after midnight on that
day, when the Jones, Oklahoma Police Department received a telephone call from the
Oklahoma County Sheriff’s Office about a possible crime at a house in Jones. At the
designated house, a Jones police officer discovered a young woman with cuts and
lacerations on her face, neck, and back. According to the officer, the young woman was
upset, crying, and in extreme pain. She told him that she had been kidnaped in Oklahoma
City by two people, a woman named Walker who had been a friend of hers in Kansas, and
2
a man whom she had met three days earlier. The Jones police officer’s handwritten field
notes list the female suspect’s name as “Tanisha Walker,” provide a Wichita, Kansas
address for this suspect, and state that she is 5’1” tall and 120 pounds. Okla. City Supp.
App. at 166.
An ambulance transported the young woman to Midwest City Regional Hospital,
where the Jones police officer and an officer from the Choctaw, Oklahoma police
department continued to interview her. The officers concluded that the suspected crimes
had occurred predominantly in Oklahoma City. They therefore reported the information
that they had obtained to the Oklahoma City Police Department.
The Oklahoma City police dispatcher notified Oklahoma City police officers,
providing the victim’s name and stating that there had been a kidnaping and that Tenisha
Walker and a man named “Hunan” or “Durrann,” id. at 116, 168, were suspected of
having committed the crime. At approximately 1:50 a.m., the dispatcher directed Officer
Parker to go to Midwest City Regional Hospital to interview the victim. See id. at 117.
At the hospital, Officer Parker spoke to the young woman, whom she found “very
incoherent due to alcohol and pain medication.” Id. at 26. A nurse woke her, and Officer
Parker began to ask her questions about the kidnaping and stabbing. On several
occasions, the woman reported that she could not remember certain events. The nurse
told Officer Parker that the memory lapses could have been caused by trauma. According
to Officer Parker, the young woman became more alert as she talked, see id. at 114, and
3
she reported that one of her abductors was Tenisha Walker, a woman approximately
5’5’’ tall and 115 pounds who lived at Tinker Air Force Base and was wearing a white -
shirt with some kind of writing and a pair of shorts. See id. at 26, 128. Officer Parker
then proceeded to the base. After interviewing Ms. Walker and consulting with a police
lieutenant, Officer Parker arrested her.
During its 4:30 p.m. news program, KFOR-TV reported that the victim had
accused Ms. Walker and an unknown male suspect of kidnaping her and stabbing her
more than twenty-five times. The report added that Ms. Walker was stationed at Tinker
and was recently arrested on prostitution charges in South Oklahoma City. See KFOR-
TV Supp. App. at 16.
The information about Ms. Walker’s arrest and the purported prostitution charge
was obtained by KFOR-TV reporter Anthony Foster, who routinely reviewed daily crime
reports in the public information office of the Oklahoma City Police Department. Mr.
Foster had read the police department’s incident report concerning Ms. Walker’s arrest
and had spoken with the police department’s public information officer about the facts
and circumstances surrounding the arrest. The public information officer had advised Mr.
Foster of Ms. Walker’s current arrest and told him that the young woman and Ms. Walker
had been arrested together in south Oklahoma City less than two weeks earlier on charges
of offering to engage in lewd acts.
At about 4:45 p.m., a public affairs officer for the Navy spoke to Mr. Foster by
4
telephone and told him that the Navy’s research indicated that Ms. Walker had no prior
arrests. He explained that Navy personnel had used Ms. Walker’s social security number
to obtain this information.
On the 5:00 p.m. newscast, Mr. Foster repeated the story of Ms. Walker’s arrest,
said that she was stationed at Tinker Air Force Base, and stated that Ms. Walker and the
victim had been arrested less than two weeks earlier for offering to engage in lewd acts.
Mr. Foster added that he had spoken with Navy officials, and that the officials had told
him that they did not believe that their Tenisha Walker was the same Tenisha Walker who
had been arrested on prostitution charges. On the 6:00 p.m. newscast, Mr. Foster
provided a similar report of the crime and Ms. Walker’s arrest, adding that “Navy
officials say they don’t believe Walker is the same woman who was arrested.” Id. 71.
On the following day, KFOR-TV reported that Ms. Walker had been released from
jail, explaining that Ms. Walker was “not the real suspect” and her arrest was “nothing
more than a case of mistaken identity.” Id. at 73. The station’s newscasts added that,
according to the Oklahoma City Police Department, there were actually two Tenisha
Walkers, and the Department had arrested the wrong one.
Ms. Walker filed this action against the City of Oklahoma City, Officer Parker,
and KFOR-TV. Against the City of Oklahoma City and Officer Parker, she asserted
claims for violating her Fourth Amendment rights as well as state law claims for false
imprisonment and malicious prosecution. Against KFOR-TV, she asserted claims for
5
defamation, negligence, and negligent infliction of emotional distress. The district court
dismissed the negligence and negligent infliction of emotional distress claims as well as
all the defamation claims except the one that concerned the report that Ms. Walker had
been previously arrested on charges of prostitution. Subsequently, the court granted
summary judgment to the defendants on all of the remaining claims.
As to Ms. Walker’s claims against Officer Parker, the court reasoned that
“[d]espite the fact that the victim was in pain, had received medication, and had ingested
alcohol, . . . the [victim’s] identification of her attacker . . . was reasonably trustworthy.
Thus, at the relevant time there was probable cause to believe Tenisha Walker committed
the crimes.” Aplt’s App. at 79 (Dist. Ct. Order filed Nov. 6, 1998). As a result, the court
concluded, Officer Parker’s warrantless arrest of Ms. Walker did not violate any of her
constitutional or statutory rights.
The court further concluded that existence of probable cause to arrest Ms. Walker
established that the City of Oklahoma City was entitled to summary judgment on Ms.
Walker’s Fourth Amendment claim, as well as on her state law claims for malicious
prosecution and false imprisonment. See id. at 79-80.
Finally, with regard to KFOR-TV, the court concluded that the reports of Ms.
Walker’s arrest were protected under Oklahoma law by the privilege governing reports of
official proceedings. The court reasoned that the privilege applied because KFOR-TV’s
reporter had obtained the information about Ms. Walker from an Oklahoma City Police
6
Department public information officer. See id. at 75-77. In the alternative, the court
held that “even if the information is not privileged, negligence has not been established
because the undisputed facts show that KFOR[-TV] exercised due care in its gathering
and reporting.” Id. at 76-77.
II. DISCUSSION
On appeal, Ms. Walker first challenges the district court’s conclusion that the
victim’s identification of her was reasonably trustworthy and that, as a result, there was
probable cause to arrest her for the suspected assault and kidnaping. Alternatively, Ms.
Walker argues that there are material issues of fact as to whether probable cause existed.
With regard to her defamation claim against KFOR-TV, Ms. Walker contends that the
district court erred in applying the fair report privilege and in concluding that KFOR-TV
exercised due care in its news gathering and reporting.
In response, the defendants maintain that the district court’s grant of summary
judgment to them is supported by the applicable law. They also argue that the district
court’s order should be summarily affirmed because Ms. Walker has failed to provide this
court with an adequate record on appeal.
We begin our analysis by considering the defendants’ arguments concerning the
inadequacy of the record. Then, because we reject the defendant’s plea for summary
affirmance, we proceed to the merits, reviewing the district court’s grant of summary
7
judgment de novo under Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c). See Butler v. City of Prairie Village, 172
F.3d 736, 745 (10th Cir. 1999).2
A. Failure to Provide an Adequate Record on Appeal
Under Tenth Circuit Rule 30.1, an appellant is permitted to file an appendix
containing relevant excerpts of the record. Although this rule excuses the appellant from
providing all the documents filed with the district court, “[t]he appellant must file an
appendix sufficient for considering and deciding the issues on appeal.” 10th Cir. R.
30.1(A)(1). When, as here, the appeal is from an order granting summary judgment, the
appellant’s appendix must include “relevant portions of affidavits, depositions, and other
supporting documents filed in connection with that motion.” 10th Cir. R. 10.3(D)(2); see
also 10th Cir. R. 30.1 (A) (stating that “[t]he requirements of [10th Cir.] Rule 10.3 for the
contents of a record on appeal apply to appellant’s appendix.”). “The court need not
remedy any failure of counsel to provide an adequate appendix.” 10th Cir. R. 30.1(A)(3);
see also McEwen v. City of Norman, 926 F.2d 1539, 1550 (10th Cir. 1991) (holding that
2
Summary judgment is warranted only when “the pleadings, depositions,
answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any,
show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is
entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c). We must construe the
record and reasonable inferences therefrom in the light most favorable to the nonmoving
party. Kaul v. Stephan, 83 F.3d 1208, 1212 (10th Cir.1996). If there are no genuine
issues of material fact in dispute, we determine whether the substantive law was correctly
applied by the district court. See id.
8
appellant’s failure to designate the relevant record established that he had not met his
burden of proving that the district court’s findings and rulings were clearly erroneous or
an abuse of discretion).
In this appeal, Ms. Walker has filed an appendix that includes only her complaint
and her first amended complaint, the defendants’ answers to those complaints, the district
court’s memorandum opinion and final judgment, her notice of appeal, and the district
court’s docket sheet. Ms. Walker’s appendix does not include the evidentiary materials
attached to the parties’ summary judgment papers. As noted, this court’s rules require
the appellant to include these evidentiary materials in the appendix. See 10th Cir. R.
10.3(D)(2), 30.1 (A). Moreover, appellate review of the issues raised by Ms. Walker in
her appellate brief is not possible unless these materials are considered.
Nevertheless, the defendants have filed supplemental appendices that contain the
relevant evidentiary materials filed with the summary judgment papers. In light of the
defendants’ submissions, the fact that these documents are readily available in the district
court file, and the importance of the issues raised by Ms. Walker, we exercise our
discretion to proceed to the merits of this appeal. See United States v. Karler, No. 95-
6426, 1997 WL 12932, at **1 n.2 (10th Cir. Jan. 15, 1997) (exercising discretion to
consider the merits of an appeal in spite of an inadequate appendix because there was no
dispute about the content of the missing materials). However, we admonish Ms. Walker’s
counsel for submission of an incomplete and cursory appendix and advise that the court’s
9
indulgence may not be forthcoming in future cases. See Stearns v. Paccar, Inc., No. 91-
1423, 1993 WL 17084, at **5 n.3 (10th Cir. Jan. 22, 1993) (admonishing appellant for a
similarly inadequate submission).
B.. Fourth Amendment, Malicious Prosecution, and False Arrest Claims
Against the City of Oklahoma City and Officer Parker
In her motion for summary judgment, Officer Parker asserted that she was entitled
to qualified immunity from Ms. Walker’s claim that she violated the Fourth Amendment
by arresting her without probable cause on April 30, 1997. The doctrine of qualified
immunity protects public officials performing discretionary functions unless they violate
“clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would
have known.” Harlow v. Fitzgerald, 457 U.S. 800, 818 (1982). Once a defendant asserts
the defense of qualified immunity, the plaintiff must: (1) establish sufficient facts to
show that the defendant violated a federal constitutional or statutory right; and (2)
demonstrate that the right in question was clearly established when the defendant acted.
See Baptiste v. J.C. Penney Co., 147 F.3d 1252, 1255 (10th Cir. 1998). In this case, the
district court based its grant of summary judgment on Ms. Walker’s failure to establish
the first of these elements: it concluded that because Officer Parker had probable cause
to arrest Ms. Walker, Ms. Walker had failed to demonstrate a violation of the Fourth
Amendment.
Under the Fourth Amendment, a warrantless arrest is permissible if there is
10
“probable cause to believe that the arrestee committed a crime”. Id. at 1256 (citing
Romero v. Fay, 45 F.3d 1472, 1476 (10th Cir. 1995)). “‘Probable cause exists if facts
and circumstances within the arresting officer’s knowledge and of which he or she has
reasonably trustworthy information are sufficient to lead a prudent person to believe that
the arrestee has committed or is committing an offense.’” Romero, 45 F.3d at 1476
(quoting Jones v. City & County of Denver, 854 F.2d 1206, 1210 (10th Cir. 1988)).
Under the qualified immunity standard, an officer effecting a warrantless arrest is
“‘entitled to immunity if a reasonable officer could have believed that probable cause
existed to arrest’ the plaintiff.” Romero, 45 F.3d at 1476 (quoting Hunter v. Bryant, 502
U.S. 224, 228 (1991)). Law enforcement officials who mistakenly conclude that
probable cause exists are still entitled to qualified immunity if their conclusion is
reasonable. See id. (citing Hunter, 502 U.S. at 227); see also Glass v. Pfeffer, 657 F.2d
252, 255-56 (10th Cir. 1981) (holding that the defendant police officer’s arrest of the
wrong person did not violate the Fourth Amendment because the arrest resulted from a
case of “reasonable mistaken identity”).
Ms. Walker now advances several arguments in support of her contention that a
reasonable officer in Officer Parker’s position would not have concluded that there was
probable cause to arrest her. First, she maintains, the fact that the victim was in pain, had
received medication, had ingested alcohol, and was (according to Officer Parker herself)
“very incoherent due to alcohol and pain medication,” Okla. City Supp. App. at 26,
11
indicates that the victim’s identification was not reasonably trustworthy or, at the very
least, that there are factual questions about the victim’s trustworthiness that render
summary judgment inappropriate.
Second, Ms. Walker argues, Officer Parker did not act reasonably because there
was easily accessible evidence that would have exonerated her. She mentions the
following information: (1) “the detailed and far more accurate description of the
assailant given by [the victim] to the Jones City police officer,” Aplt’s Br. at 19; and (2)
information obtained from a records search, which presumably would have revealed a
Kansas address for the correct suspect (Tanesha Louise Walker) as well as the fact that
Ms. Walker had never been arrested. See id.
Finally, Ms. Walker points to a police report summarizing a telephone interview
of the victim by an Oklahoma City police officer on the evening of April 30, 1997. The
report states that when the victim was asked if the suspect had anything to do with Tinker
Air Force Base, the victim answered, “No.” Okla. City Supp. App. at 31. Morever, the
report indicates that the officer asked the victim “if she had told the officer at the hospital
anything about Tinker AFB and she stated ‘No.’” Id.
Ms. Walker’s arguments establish that the issue of whether a reasonable officer
could have found probable cause is a close one. However, upon review of the record and
the applicable law, we agree with the district court that “‘a reasonable officer could have
believed that probable cause existed to arrest [Ms. Walker].’” See Romero, 45 F.3d at
12
1476 (quoting Hunter, 502 U.S. at 228).
First, with regard to Ms. Walker’s contention that the victim was intoxicated,
traumatized, and incoherent, we note that Officer Parker testified in her deposition that
the victim was “coherent” when she provided a description of the suspects, that, “[a]s she
talked more, she became more a little more alert,” and that “she would start dozing off
again after I pretty much got all the information I needed.” Okla. City Supp. App. at 114
(emphasis added). When police officers interview crime victims in order to obtain
information about suspects, the victims are often traumatized by what has happened to
them. Nevertheless, “law enforcement officers are entitled to rely on information
supplied by the victim of a crime, absent some indication that the information is not
reasonably trustworthy or reliable.” Clay v. Conlee, 815 F. 2d 1164, 1168 (8th Cir.
1987) (collecting cases). Thus, as Officer Parker notes in her appellate brief, statements
of traumatized victims, even when they have been drinking, have been held to be
sufficient to establish probable cause to arrest the suspects identified by the victims. See,
e.g., Lallemand v. University of R. I., 9 F.3d 214, 216 (1st Cir. 1993) (concluding that
the fact that a victim had a lot to drink did not undercut probable cause because her
identification of the suspect was positive, and there was “no suggestion that she was
incoherent or vague when she gave her statements to police”); Clay, 815 F. 2d at 1168
(concluding that although the victim of a rape was intoxicated and appeared
“fuzzy-headed” when she first arrived at the hospital, arrest of defendant was supported
13
by probable cause when victim was not “incoherent, irrational, confused, or intoxicated”
when she spoke to police officers). This circuit has concluded that, “when examining
informant evidence used to support a claim of probable cause for a warrant, or a
warrantless arrest, the skepticism and careful scrutiny usually found in cases involving
informants . . . is appropriately relaxed if the informant is an identified victim or ordinary
citizen witness.” Easton v. City of Boulder, 776 F.2d 1441, 1449 (10th Cir. 1987).
Here, according to the evidence before the court, the victim, although traumatized
and apparently intoxicated, provided Officer Parker with the name and address of a
suspect (Tenisha Walker who lived at Tinker Air Force Base). When she provided that
specific information, she was coherent. Thus, the state of the victim does not establish
that a reasonable officer could not have concluded that there was probable cause to arrest
Ms. Walker.
We are similarly unconvinced by Ms. Walker’s argument that Officer Parker did
not act reasonably because there was easily accessible evidence that would have
exonerated her. Because her argument here is based on an expansive reading of two of
our decisions regarding warrantless arrests, Baptiste and Romero, we briefly examine
those decisions.
In Baptiste, the plaintiff alleged that she had been arrested for shoplifting without
probable cause. In holding that the defendant police officers were not entitled to
summary judgment on qualified immunity grounds, we noted that the one of them had
14
viewed a videotape which depicted the alleged crime. We observed that the videotape
was insufficient as a matter of law to establish probable cause to arrest the plaintiff and
concluded that “police officers may not ignore easily accessible evidence and thereby
delegate their duty to investigate and make an independent probable cause determination
based on that investigation.” Baptiste, 147 F.3d at 1259.
In Romero, we reached a different conclusion, holding that in light of the
statements of two witnesses implicating the plaintiff in a murder, a reasonable police
officer could have believed that there was probable cause to arrest the plaintiff. We
rejected the plaintiff’s argument that the a reasonable officer would have investigated
alibi witnesses before effecting the arrest. As a result, we concluded that the defendant
officer was entitled to qualified immunity. We found no case support for the plaintiff’s
“broad proposition that a police officer who interviews witnesses and concludes that
probable cause exists to arrest violates the Fourth Amendment by failing to investigate the
defendant’s alleged alibi witnesses.” Romero, 45 F.3d at 1476. Instead, we concluded,
“the cases state that the probable cause standard of the Fourth Amendment requires
officers to reasonably interview witnesses readily available at the scene, investigate basic
evidence, or otherwise inquire if a crime has been committed at all before invoking the
power of warrantless arrest and detention.” Id. at 1476-77 (emphasis added).
We disagree with Ms. Walker’s contention that there was “readily available”
evidence from which a reasonable officer would have concluded that probable cause was
15
lacking. In contrast to Baptiste, there was no videotape of the suspected crime available
for Officer Parker’s viewing. In contrast to the cases we discussed in Romero, there
were no other available witnesses at the crime scene whom Officer Parker could have
interviewed in order to obtain information about the suspects.
Moreover, the first evidentiary items on which Ms. Walker relies—the suspect’s
physical characteristics (5’1’’ tall and 120 pounds) and the suspect’s Wichita
address—are both contained in the Jones police officer’s handwritten field notes. See
Okla. City Supp. App. at 166. There is no indication in the record that these handwritten
notes were available to Officer Parker. Her police report and her deposition testimony
both indicate that she was only provided with the name of the victim, the names of the
suspects, and a general description of the crime (i.e. that “there’s been a kidnapping”).
See id. at 26, 116. In light of the information that she had been provided by the police
dispatcher and the information provided by the victim, Officer Parker was not required to
interview the Jones police officer to determine what the victim had previously said about
the suspect.
The other evidence on which Ms. Walker relies—information from a national
records search—does not undermine the reasonableness of Officer Parker’s decision to
arrest her. Although Ms. Walker does not specify precisely what information would have
been available through this search, we presume that such a search would have revealed
that there was a Tanesha Louise Walker who lived in Wichita, Kansas who had been
16
arrested for prostitution and that Ms. Walker herself had no prior arrests. Even so, the
victim’s statement to Officer Walker that the woman who assaulted her was the Tenisha
Walker who lived at Tinker Air Force base provided reasonable grounds for the arrest.
Ms. Walker’s final challenge to the district court’s conclusion that Officer Parker
acted reasonably is based on a police report’s description of an interview with the victim
on the evening of April 30, 1997 (conducted not by Officer Parker but by another
Oklahoma City police officer). That police report states that when asked in this evening
interview if the suspect had anything to do with Tinker Air Force Base, the victim
answered, “No.” Id. at 31. Moreover, the report indicates, when the officer asked the
victim “if she had told the officer at the hospital anything about Tinker AFB[,] . . . she
stated ‘No.’”Id.
That report raises serious concerns. If the victim never told Officer Parker that
Tenisha Walker lived at Tinker Air Force Base, then it is highly questionable whether
Officer Parker had probable cause to arrest her. Unfortunately for Ms. Walker, however,
the statement in the police report as to what the victim said about her prior statement to
Officer Parker is hearsay. See Miller v. Field, 35 F.3d 1088, 1091 (6th Cir. 1994)
(concluding that “statements of the victim, the alleged assailants, and various witnesses, .
. . contained hearsay information, not facts observed by the preparer of the police
report”); United States v. Pazsint, 703 F.2d 420, 424 (9th Cir.1983) (“It is well
established that entries in a police report which result from the officer's own observations
17
and knowledge may be admitted but that statements made by third persons under no
business duty to report may not.”) (citations omitted). Although a nonmoving party need
not produce evidence “in a form that would be admissible at trial, . . . the content or
substance of the evidence must be admissible.” Thomas v. International Business
Machs., 48 F.3d 478, 485 (10th Cir.1995) (internal quotation omitted); see also Lancaster
v. Independent Sch. Dist. No. 5., 149 F.3d 1228, 1236 (10th Cir. 1998) (refusing to
consider plaintiff’s hearsay evidence in response to the defendant’s summary judgment
motion). The record therefore contains no admissible evidence to rebut Officer Parker’s
sworn testimony that the victim told her that the suspect lived at Tinker Air Force Base.
Accordingly, we conclude that Officer Parker acted reasonably in determining that
there was probable cause to arrest Ms. Walker. As the district court noted, that
conclusion defeats not only Ms. Walker’s Fourth Amendment claims against Officer
Parker and the City of Oklahoma City but also her claims for malicious prosecution and
false imprisonment. See Aplt’s App. at 80 (Dist. Ct. Order filed Nov. 6, 1998, citing
Overall v. State ex rel. Dept. of Public Safety, 910 P.2d 1087 (Okla. Ct. App. 1995) and
Meyers v. Ideal Basic Indus., Inc., 940 F.2d 1379 (10th Cir. 1991). Thus, the district
court properly granted summary judgment to Officer Parker and the City of Oklahoma
City.
C. Defamation Claim Against KFOR-TV
18
Pursuant to the Supreme Court’s decision in Gertz v. Robert Welch, Inc., 418 U.S
323 (1974), individual states may define the appropriate standard of liability of the news
media for defamatory falsehoods that injure a private individual. Under Oklahoma law,
negligence is the standard of liability. See Martin v. Griffin Television, Inc., 549 P.2d
85, 92 (Okla.1976). Thus, in reporting news stories about private individuals, the media
must exercise ordinary care—that “degree of care which ordinarily prudent persons,
engaged in the same kind of business,” usually exercise under similar circumstances. Id.
A media defendant may be held liable for defaming a private individual if that individual
establishes that: (1) the media defendant published a defamatory falsehood concerning
the plaintiff; (2) the defendant acted negligently in failing to ascertain that the statement
was false; and (3) the plaintiff suffered damages as a result of the falsehood. See Colbert
v. World Publishing Co., 747 P.2d 286, 288 (Okla. 1987); Anson v. Erlanger Minerals &
Metals, Inc., 702 P.2d 393, 396 (Okla. Ct. App. 1985).
In this case, the district court granted summary judgment to the defendant KFOR-
TV on Ms. Walker’s defamation claim on the basis of the fair report privilege, a creation
of both statutory and common law in Oklahoma. The court concluded in the alternative
that the undisputed facts established that KFOR-TV had exercised due care in
investigating and reporting the story about Ms. Walker’s arrest and that, as a result, the
record did not support her allegations of negligence.
The statutory provision regarding the fair report privilege protects
19
communications made in three circumstances:
First. In any legislative or judicial proceeding or any other
proceeding authorized by law;
Second. In the proper discharge of an official duty;
Third. By a fair and true report of any legislative or judicial or
other proceeding authorized by law, or anything said in the
course thereof, and any and all expressions of opinion in regard
thereto, and criticisms thereon, and any and all criticisms upon
the official acts of any and all public officers. . . .
Okla. Stat. tit. 12, § 1443.1.
The common law privilege concerns accurate and complete reports of official
actions. It provides:
The publication of defamatory matter concerning another in a
report of an official action or proceeding or of a meeting open
to the public that deals with a matter of public concern is
privileged if the report is accurate and complete or a fair
abridgement of the occurrence reported.
Wright v. Grove Sun Newspaper Co., 873 P.2d 983, 989 (Okla. 1994) (quoting
Restatement (Second) of Torts § 611) (1977). The common law privilege “is not
conditioned upon the truth or falsity of the reported material, the character of the
defamed person, nor on the newsworthiness of the event; rather, its applicability is
determined by the nature of the occasion at which the republished material was secured
for news coverage.” Id. at 989.
In this appeal, Ms. Walker challenges both grounds on which the district court
granted summary judgment to KFOR-TV. She maintains that KFOR-TV’s broadcasts
are not protected by the fair report privilege and that the district court also erred in
20
concluding that the record did not support her allegations of negligence.
We have some doubt about the district court’s application of the fair report
privilege. The court appeared to base its conclusion on the fact that the KFOR-TV
reporter obtained information about Ms. Walker’s purported prior arrest for prostitution
from the Oklahoma City Police Department’s public information officer. It is not clear
from the cases cited by the district court and KFOR-TV that the Oklahoma fair report
privilege protects all communications made by police public information officers.
Indeed, the Oklahoma Supreme Court’s decision in Wright emphasized that the privilege
is triggered by specific kinds of “occasion[s].” Id. at 989. In that case, the critical
“occasion” was a district attorney’s news conference, “a legitimate activity of his office,
open to the public and held for the purpose of addressing a matter of general concern to
the community.” Id. The court stressed that “[c]entral to the [common law]
[Restatement] § 611 privilege we adopt today is that the information was garnered at
meetings open to the public and not from private conversations between reporters,
victims and/or police officers.” Id. at 991.
Here, there is no indication that the police department public information officer
provided the KFOR-TV reporter with the erroneous information about Ms. Walker’s
purported prior arrest at such a public meeting. There is thus some question as to the
applicability of the common law privilege. As to the statutory privilege, neither KFOR-
TV nor the district court have cited authority establishing that a public information
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officer’s providing erroneous information about a suspect’s arrest record would
constitute a “judicial proceeding” or “the proper discharge of an official duty” under
Okla. Stat. tit. 12, § 1443.1.
As to the district court’s alternative conclusion— that KFOR-TV was not
negligent— Ms. Walker argues that there are controverted issues of fact. She focuses on
the affidavit of the Navy public affairs officer, which states that he informed KFOR-TV
reporter Foster during a 4:45 p.m. telephone call on April 30, 1997 that a search of social
security numbers indicated that Ms. Walker had no previous arrests. See KFOR-TV
Supp. App. at 25-26. Ms. Walker contends that, in light of that information, KFOR-TV
acted negligently in continuing to report that she had been previously arrested for
prostitution.
We are not convinced by Ms. Walker’s argument. The record does indicate that,
after Mr. Foster received the 4:45 p.m. telephone call from the Navy official, KFOR-TV
continued to report in its 5:00 p.m. and 6:00 p.m. broadcasts that Ms. Walker had been
previously arrested for prostitution. However, the station also reported in these
broadcasts that Navy officials did not believe that Ms. Walker had been previously
arrested. KFOR-TV’s broadcasts thus reflected the conflicting information that it had
received–a statement from the Oklahoma City Police Department’s public information
officer that Ms. Walker had been previously arrested and a statement by the Navy official
that their research indicated that she had not been previously arrested. As KFOR-TV
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notes, Ms. Walker failed to offer any evidence in her summary judgment papers
indicating that KFOR-TV’s reliance on the public information officers’ statements in
these circumstances constituted negligence. See generally Malson v. Palmer
Broadcasting Group, 936 P.2d 940, 942 (Okla. 1997) (noting that the Restatement
(Second) of Torts § 580B, cmt. g, provides that “in defamation cases involving private
individuals, evidence of customs and practices within the news profession, which may be
relevant in determining whether ordinary care was practiced in a given situation, will
normally come from an expert”).
Accordingly, we conclude that the district court properly granted summary
judgment to the defendant KFOR-TV on Ms. Walker’s defamation claim.
III. CONCLUSION
We note with sadness the result in this entire matter. It seems quite factually
unlikely that the victim provided Officer Parker with the information that her attacker
lived at Tinker Air Force base, and that unlikely fact has proven dispositive in this
appeal. In order to minimize the possibilities of such an arrest in the future, an
investigation and evaluation of the City’s procedures may be warranted.
As to KFOR-TV, the question of whether journalistic ethics further compelled
more evaluation of the Navy’s position based upon KFOR-TV’s investigation of social
security numbers before the station broadcasted information that could injure an innocent
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party is likewise not before us, and must be left to the company’s policymakers.
We regret that Ms. Walker was arrested and subjected to this mistake. However,
her claims as argued and preserved do not rise to violations of federal or state law. For
the reasons set forth above, we therefore AFFIRM the district court’s decision granting
summary judgment to the City of Oklahoma City, Officer Parker, and KFOR-TV on all
of Ms. Walker’s claims.
Entered for the Court,
Robert H. Henry
United States Circuit Judge
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