United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
No. 18-2261
ROLANDO PENATE,
Plaintiff, Appellee,
v.
ANNE KACZMAREK,
Defendant, Appellant,
KRIS FOSTER; RANDALL RAVITZ; JOSEPH BALLOU; ROBERT IRWIN; RANDY
THOMAS; SONJA FARAK; SHARON SALEM; JAMES HANCHETT; JULIE NASSIF;
LINDA HAN; ESTATE OF KEVIN BURNHAM; STEVEN KENT; JOHN WADLEGGER;
GREGG BIGDA; EDWARD KALISH; CITY OF SPRINGFIELD,
Defendants.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
[Hon. Katherine A. Robertson, U.S. Magistrate Judge]
Before
Lynch, Kayatta, and Barron,
Circuit Judges.
David H. Rich, with whom Maria T. Davis and Todd & Weld, LLP
were on brief, for appellant.
Luke Ryan, with whom Sasson, Turnbull, Ryan & Hoose was on
brief, for appellee.
Matthew R. Segal, American Civil Liberties Union Foundation
of Massachusetts, Inc., Emma Quinn-Judge, Monica Shah, and Zalkind
Duncan & Bernstein LLP on brief for American Civil Liberties Union
of Massachusetts and Massachusetts Association of Criminal Defense
Lawyers, amici curiae.
June 26, 2019
LYNCH, Circuit Judge. This appeal presents novel
questions about the scope of absolute prosecutorial and government
attorney immunity from claims asserted under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
Appellee Rolando Penate filed this § 1983 action against
seventeen defendants after the dismissal with prejudice of his
2013 Massachusetts criminal conviction for drug distribution.
This appeal is from an order denying absolute immunity to one of
those defendants, Anne Kaczmarek, a former Massachusetts Assistant
Attorney General. Penate's complaint alleged that Kaczmarek
unlawfully withheld (and worked with others to unlawfully
withhold) exculpatory evidence from Penate's counsel; from the
Hampden County, Massachusetts District Attorney, whose office
prosecuted Penate in Hampden County Superior Court; and from that
state court. The withheld evidence showed that a drug laboratory
chemist, Sonja Farak, had been battling drug addiction and had
tampered with samples she was assigned to test around the time she
tested the samples in Penate's case. Kaczmarek had obtained the
evidence at issue while she was prosecuting Farak on state charges
of tampering with evidence and drug possession.
After the magistrate judge rejected Kaczmarek's motion
to dismiss on grounds of absolute immunity, Penate v. Kaczmarek,
No. 17-cv-30119, 2018 WL 6437077, at *16 (D. Mass. Dec. 7, 2018),
Kaczmarek filed this interlocutory appeal. We affirm.
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We are required to "make two important assumptions about
the case: first, that [Penate's] allegations are entirely true;
and, second, that they allege constitutional violations for which
§ 1983 provides a remedy." Buckley v. Fitzsimmons, 509 U.S. 259,
261 (1993); see also Guzman-Rivera v. Rivera-Cruz, 55 F.3d 26, 28
(1st Cir. 1995). The first of these assumptions is critical here,
as our rejections of Kaczmarek's novel claims to absolute immunity
are fact-bound conclusions.
After recounting the allegations in the complaint and
the history of this suit, we address Kaczmarek's two theories for
absolute immunity.1 She first argues that she enjoys absolute
prosecutorial immunity because the conduct alleged in the
complaint occurred during the time period when she was assigned to
prosecute Farak. We reject this argument because, on the facts
alleged in the complaint, Kaczmarek's decision to withhold
evidence from the criminal prosecution of Penate lacked a
"functional tie" to her prosecutorial role in Farak's separate
case. Buckley, 500 U.S. at 277. Kaczmarek alternatively seeks
absolute immunity on the ground that, in performing some conduct
alleged in the complaint, she functioned as an advocate for the
government in an evidentiary hearing associated with the criminal
case against Penate. But certain allegations in the complaint are
1 Kaczmarek has not raised the defense of qualified
immunity.
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best read to allege that Kaczmarek played an administrative role
concerning this hearing. On that basis, we reject this second
argument for absolute immunity.
I.
A. Facts Alleged in the Complaint
Penate was charged by the Hampden County District
Attorney with several drug-related offenses on November 16, 2011.
The suspected drugs were sent to the Massachusetts Department of
Public Health's Amherst Drug Lab and were assigned to Farak for
analysis. Farak reported that the substances from Penate's case
had all tested positive for the presence of controlled substances.
Farak tested the samples on December 22, 2011, January
6, 2012, and January 9, 2012. Also on December 22, Farak entered
on a Diary Card kept as part of her treatment for drug addiction
that she "tried to resist using [at] work but ended up failing."
Farak later placed this Diary Card in the trunk of her
car, where, as discussed below, it was found, along with similar
worksheets, by the state police. Those documents revealed that,
during the period that the lab held the samples in Penate's case,
Farak had struggled with drug addiction, had frequently consumed
drugs while at work, and had often tampered with and used drug
samples and supplies held by the lab. At the heart of this case
is Kaczmarek's failure to disclose this exculpatory evidence to
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Penate, to his prosecutor, and to the court in his criminal
proceeding.2
The charges against Penate were still pending when the
Massachusetts Attorney General's Office (AGO or AG) began
investigating Farak for misconduct at the Amherst Drug Lab. On
January 19, 2013, AGO investigators obtained a warrant to search
Farak's car, searched the car, and seized hundreds of pages of
paper, including the Diary Card and other mental health worksheets.
Farak was charged with tampering with evidence and drug
possession on January 22, 2013. Kaczmarek, a prosecutor in the
AG's Enterprise and Major Crimes Unit, was assigned to prosecute
Farak, who ultimately pleaded guilty in January 2014.
The complaint then tracks the AGO's actions related to
the exculpatory evidence that Penate claims was unlawfully
withheld during his criminal proceeding. The Diary Card and other
mental health worksheets first went unmentioned or were
2 Penate also claims that Kaczmarek somehow violated his
constitutional rights by artificially narrowing the scope of the
investigation against Farak, after Farak had been arrested and
arraigned. But, because that claim concerns Kaczmarek's choices
regarding the course of a prosecution she was actually conducting,
after a probable cause determination had been made, absolute
immunity does bar it. See Buckley, 509 U.S. at 273 ("[A]cts
undertaken by a prosecutor in preparing for the initiation of
judicial proceedings or for trial, and which occur in the course
of his role as an advocate for the State, are entitled to the
protections of absolute immunity."); see also Kalina v. Fletcher,
522 U.S. 118, 129 (1997) (holding that a prosecutor's "activities
in connection with the preparation and filing of . . . charging
documents . . . are protected by absolute immunity").
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characterized as "assorted lab paperwork" by investigators in
police reports and returns for search warrants. "This was not an
oversight," the complaint alleges, "but reflected a collective
decision on the part of Kaczmarek, . . . [Police Sergeant Joseph]
Ballou, and . . . [others] to deny the existence of this highly
probative evidence." The complaint then alleges that, around the
same time, Kaczmarek discouraged Ballou from following up on an
allegation of evidence tampering by Farak in 2005.
In February 2013, Ballou attached copies of the Diary
Card and other mental health worksheets to an email to Kaczmarek
with the subject line "FARAK Admissions." "Here are those forms
with the admissions of drug use I was talking about," he wrote.
In March, neither the Diary Card nor the other mental
health worksheets were included in the packets of evidence related
to Farak provided to all of the Massachusetts District Attorneys.
The packets were accompanied by a letter from the head of the AG's
Criminal Bureau, John Verner; the letter explained that the AG was
investigating Farak and stated, "Pursuant to this office's
obligation to provide potentially exculpatory information to the
District Attorneys as well as information necessary to your
Offices' determination about how to proceed with cases in which
related narcotic evidence was tested at the Amherst Laboratory,
please find the below listed materials . . . ."
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That same day in March, Kaczmarek submitted to Verner
and her other supervisors a Prosecution Memo that contained
multiple references to Farak's mental health worksheets.
Kaczmarek stated that the worksheets had "not been submitted to
the [Farak] grand jury out of an abundance of caution," although
"[c]ase law" indicated that "the paperwork [was] not privileged."
Verner responded with a hand-written note telling her that these
documents had "NOT" been "turned over to DAs offices yet."
Despite this withholding of the mental health worksheets
from the District Attorneys (and later from Penate and the Hampden
County Superior Court), Kaczmarek did disclose the worksheets to
Farak's defense attorney. In doing so, Kaczmarek told the defense
that the documents would not be turned over to any "Farak
defendants" (that is, defendants seeking relief based on Farak's
misconduct) and that the AG's office considered the documents to
be "privileged."
Penate, who was awaiting his trial on the criminal
charges, filed a motion to dismiss in July 2013 based on the
charges against Farak. The judge ordered an evidentiary hearing
on the issue of Farak's misconduct between November 2011 and
January 2012, when the lab had custody of the substances from
Penate's case. Penate's motion was consolidated with similar
motions from about a dozen Farak-defendant cases pending in Hampden
County Superior Court. A hearing in these consolidated motions
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on the timing and scope of Farak's misconduct was scheduled for
September 9, 2013.
Before the hearing, Assistant District Attorney Eduardo
Velazquez, who was prosecuting Penate, sought any exculpatory
evidence for the hearing from the AGO. He was told that all
relevant evidence had already been provided to the DAs, even though
the mental health worksheets, as Verner had noted, had "NOT" been
disclosed.
Ballou received a subpoena duces tecum for the hearing
on the consolidated motions "command[ing] the production of all
documents and photographs pertaining to the investigation of Sonja
Farak and the Amherst Drug Lab."3 Assistant Attorney General Kris
Foster, from the AGO's Appeals Division, was assigned to handle
the response to the subpoena. In meetings about how to respond
to the subpoena, Kaczmarek divulged to Foster and Foster's
supervisor, Randall Ravitz, that she and Ballou possessed the
mental health worksheets. But Kaczmarek took the position that
these documents were irrelevant to the Farak defendants. She also
3 Before Penate's motion was consolidated with the other
Farak defendants' motions, Penate served Ballou and Kaczmarek with
subpoenas to testify at the evidentiary hearing ordered in Penate's
case. However, the complaint does not allege that Kaczmarek was
subpoenaed to appear at the post-conviction proceeding. The
allegations in the complaint about Kaczmarek recounted in the
following paragraphs all pertain to the Ballou subpoena and a
related court order.
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urged that the documents should not be produced because several
contained information about Farak's mental health treatment.
Foster filed a motion to quash the subpoena. In the
alternative, Foster sought a protective order excluding from the
scope of the subpoena information including "emails responsive to
the subpoena" and "information concerning the health or medical or
psychological treatment of individuals."
Ballou testified at the hearing on the consolidated
motions. At Foster's instruction, Ballou did not reveal the
existence of the mental health worksheets. During the hearing,
the judge ordered Foster to review Ballou's "file" on Farak and to
present to the court for in camera review copies of any undisclosed
documents in the file.
Foster, Kaczmarek, and Verner discussed whether the
order required Ballou to submit his emails to Kaczmarek about
Farak. Kaczmarek ultimately asked Ballou to bring his file about
the case to Boston for her to review. The paper file Ballou
brought to Boston contained none of the mental health worksheets,
so Kaczmarek told Foster that all of the documents in Ballou's
file had already been disclosed. Foster then sent the judge a
letter stating that "every document in [Ballou's] possession has
already been disclosed."
The day Foster sent the letter, Penate's counsel emailed
Foster requesting to inspect the documents seized from Farak's
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car. Foster forwarded the email to Kaczmarek, who responded: "No.
Why is this relevant to this case. I really don't like him."
Foster told Penate's counsel that the AG's position was that the
evidence from the car was irrelevant to any case other than
Farak's.
Penate's motion to dismiss the criminal charges was
denied by the state court based on a finding that Farak's
misconduct began after she handled the samples in Penate's case.
Although Penate subpoenaed Kaczmarek to testify at his trial,
Foster's motion to quash the subpoena was granted, as was
Velazquez's motion in limine to preclude Penate from arguing that
Farak was engaged in misconduct between November 2011 and January
2012. In December 2013, Penate was convicted of one count of
Distributing a Class A substance and was sentenced to five to seven
years in prison.
In October 2014, an inspection of the evidence found in
Farak's car for a different Massachusetts criminal case revealed
the Diary Card and the other mental health worksheets. This
discovery prompted Verner, the head of the AG's Criminal Bureau,
to send copies of all of the documents seized in the car to the
Massachusetts DAs in November 2014.
Based on the newly produced evidence, Penate filed a
motion for a new trial in 2015, which was again consolidated with
the cases of other Farak defendants. These defendants sought
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discovery from the AGO on prosecutorial misconduct by attorneys in
that office. In opposing the discovery, the AGO represented:
The defendants' proposed claim of
prosecutorial misconduct based on actions by
the Attorney General's Office fails for the
very simple fact that the AGO is not the
prosecutor of any of these cases. Certainly,
the AGO prosecuted Sonja Farak; but this is
not Farak's case. Instead, in these cases the
AGO was a non-party from which the defendants
previously sought expansive post-conviction
discovery. In that capacity, the AGO was well
supported by case law in presenting arguments
opposing the proposed discovery requests, just
as any other non-party might do.
In January 2017, Penate's motion for a new trial was
allowed, with the assent of the Hampden County DA. In June 2017,
a judge dismissed Penate's conviction with prejudice. The judge
found that "Kaczmarek's and Foster's deliberate withholding of
exculpatory evidence was particularly egregious in the Penate
case" and "qualifies as a fraud upon the court."
B. History of this Suit
Penate filed this suit on September 5, 2017 in federal
district court in Massachusetts. His complaint asserted two
claims against Kaczmarek: the § 1983 claim already mentioned and
a state tort law claim for intentional infliction of emotional
distress. Under Massachusetts law, Kaczmarek's immunity from the
tort claim falls with her immunity from the § 1983 claim.4 See
4 Kaczmarek's opening brief on appeal argues in a single
paragraph that the tort claim is also "barred by the general
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Chicopee Lions Club v. Dist. Att'y for Hampden Dist., 485 N.E.2d
673, 677 (Mass. 1985).
Count IV of the complaint asserts § 1983 violations by
Kaczmarek, Foster, and Foster's supervisor, Ravitz. It alleges
that Kaczmarek knew that the mental health worksheets were
exculpatory evidence in the cases of Farak defendants like Penate
and that Kaczmarek had a duty under Brady v. United States, 373
U.S. 83 (1963), to disclose such evidence and to make truthful
statements about such evidence. In paragraph 433, the complaint
states that Kaczmarek, Foster, and Ravitz, "prior to, during, and
following Plaintiff's trial, intentionally, recklessly, and/or
with deliberate indifference to their legal obligations, concealed
Brady material, lied about, and otherwise failed to disclose Brady
material to the Hampden County ADA prosecuting Plaintiff."
Paragraph 434 alleges the same failure to disclose, to "Plaintiff's
counsel and the Hampden County Superior Court." 5 Count VIII
Massachusetts common law litigation privilege." But Kaczmarek did
not raise this defense in the district court, the magistrate judge
did not rule on it, and we do not consider it. See United States
v. Zannino, 895 F.2d 1, 17 (1st Cir. 1990); see also Espinal-
Dominguez v. Puerto Rico, 352 F.3d 490, 495-96 (1st Cir. 2003)
(describing the scope of appellate jurisdiction from non-final
district court orders).
5 In the order denying Kaczmarek's motion to dismiss, the
magistrate judge recounted the complaint's allegations that
Kaczmarek conspired with investigators to mischaracterize the
mental health worksheets as "lab paperwork" and that Kaczmarek
discouraged Ballou from following up on a lead. See Penate, 2018
WL 6437077, at *14. To the extent these allegations are offered
to support a claim that Kaczmarek violated Penate's constitutional
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alleged that this conduct by Kaczmarek amounted to the intentional
infliction of emotional distress.
Kaczmarek's motion to dismiss the complaint argued that
she was entitled to absolute immunity, raising the two theories
previously identified. The magistrate judge denied the motion
because Penate's claims against Kaczmarek were "not related to her
prosecution of Farak," Penate, 2018 WL 6437077, at *16, and because
Kaczmarek was not engaged in a function analogous to a prosecutor's
when she worked on the requests for exculpatory information in the
AG's and Ballou's possession, see id. at *15.
II.
A. Jurisdiction, Standard of Review, and Kaczmarek's Burden
We have jurisdiction over Kaczmarek's interlocutory
appeal from the denial of immunity because it "turns on a purely
legal question." Limone v. Condon, 372 F.3d 39, 50 (1st Cir.
2004); see also Filler v. Kellett, 859 F.3d 148, 152 (1st Cir.
rights by artificially narrowing the scope of the investigation
against Farak, we have held, in footnote 2, supra, that Kaczmarek
is absolutely immune.
Penate argues in his brief that these factual
allegations were made in support of paragraph 433 of the complaint,
which alleges that Kaczmarek failed to disclose exculpatory
evidence to the DAs, including to the DA prosecuting Penate. And
Kaczmarek admits in her reply brief that these allegations could
properly be used to support the theory in paragraph 433. To the
extent the facts are alleged for this purpose, we agree with Penate
that these two factual allegations are well-pleaded and need not
be disregarded as conclusory. See Ocasio-Hernández v. Fortuño-
Burset, 640 F.3d 1, 14 (1st Cir. 2011) (defining well-pleaded
facts).
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2017) (lacking interlocutory jurisdiction because immunity
depended on facts requiring further development). Penate's
complaint alleges the facts necessary to evaluate Kaczmarek's
defense; we are required to take those facts as true at this stage;
and Kaczmarek, in any event, does not dispute them. The only
question is whether, on those facts, Kaczmarek is entitled to
absolute immunity and thus to dismissal of the complaint.
Our review is de novo. Garnier v. Rodríguez, 506 F.3d
22, 26 (1st Cir. 2007). We start with "[t]he presumption . . .
that qualified rather than absolute immunity is sufficient."
Burns v. Reed, 500 U.S. 478, 486 (1991). And Kaczmarek, as the
"official seeking absolute immunity[,] bears the burden of showing
that such immunity is justified." Id. at 486. That burden is a
heavy one. See, e.g., Buckley, 509 U.S. at 269 ("[W]e have been
'quite sparing' in recognizing absolute immunity for state actors
. . . ." (quoting Forrester v. White, 484 U.S. 219, 224 (1988)).
Kaczmarek has not satisfied it here, either on her first
theory that she is entitled to absolute prosecutorial immunity
because she prosecuted Farak or on her second theory that she
should enjoy the absolute immunity afforded to certain government
attorneys. We address these theories in turn.
B. Absolute Prosecutorial Immunity
The Supreme Court first recognized the absolute immunity
of prosecutors from certain § 1983 claims in Imbler v. Pachtman,
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424 U.S. 409 (1976). There, the Court held that prosecutors are
absolutely immune in exercising the core prosecutorial functions
of "initiating a prosecution and . . . presenting the State's
case." Id. at 431.
Following Imbler, the Court has used a "functional
approach" to decide whether state officials are entitled to
absolute immunity from particular § 1983 claims. Burns, 500 U.S.
at 486. This approach looks to "the nature of the function
performed, not the identity of the actor who performed it,"
Forrester, 484 U.S. at 229, nor to "the particular act" in
isolation, Mireles v. Waco, 502 U.S. 9, 12 (1991) (per curiam)
(citing Stump v. Sparkman, 435 U.S. 349, 356 (1978)).
Applying this approach, the Supreme Court has recognized
that several "functions of contemporary prosecutors are entitled
to absolute immunity." Buckley, 509 U.S. at 269. These include:
"appearing before a judge and presenting evidence in support of a
motion for a search warrant," Burns, 500 U.S. at 491, and
"prepar[ing] and filing . . . [a criminal] information and [a]
motion for an arrest warrant," Kalina v. Fletcher, 522 U.S. 118,
129 (1997). The basic "principle" of these cases is "that acts
undertaken by a prosecutor in preparing for the initiation of
judicial proceedings or for trial, and which occur in the course
of his role as an advocate for the State, are entitled to the
protections of absolute immunity." Buckley, 509 U.S. at 273.
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But the Supreme Court has rejected claims to absolute
prosecutorial immunity where the prosecutor's conduct lacked a
"functional tie to [a] judicial process" initiated by the
prosecutor. Id. at 277. So, absolute immunity does not protect
prosecutors when they give advice to police during a criminal
investigation, Burns, 500 U.S. at 495-96, fabricate evidence long
before a grand jury has made an indictment, Buckley, 509 U.S. 275-
76, or make statements to the press in announcing an indictment,
id. at 276-78. These functions have been deemed "administrative"
or "investigative," and, in exercising them, "a prosecutor is in
no different position than other executive officials," such as
police, and "qualified immunity is the norm for them." Id. at
278.
All of these Supreme Court cases involved claims arising
out of criminal proceedings which were initiated by the same
officials who were seeking absolute prosecutorial immunity. But
Kaczmarek was not Penate's prosecutor; 6 she rests her broad
assertion of absolute prosecutorial immunity on her role as Farak's
prosecutor. Kaczmarek's claim is thus a novel one, as neither the
6 Kaczmarek's agency, the AGO, had no control over
Penate's prosecution and thus Kaczmarek cannot, and indeed does
not, claim to have been his prosecutor. See Kulwicki v. Dawson,
969 F.2d 1454, 1467 (3d Cir. 1992) (denying prosecutor lacking
"official control over" a prosecution prosecutorial immunity based
on that prosecution). Indeed, the AG, for whom Kaczmarek worked,
admitted that it was not Penate's prosecutor but rather "was a
non-party from which [Penate] . . . sought . . . discovery."
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Supreme Court nor this court has ever extended absolute
prosecutorial immunity to conduct by a prosecutor in a proceeding
not initiated by that prosecutor or by an office that prosecutor
supervises.7
Absolute immunity is not triggered here by the simple
fact that the conduct alleged in the complaint occurred while
Kaczmarek was pursuing the commonwealth's criminal charges against
Farak. See Filler, 859 F.3d at 153 ("Importantly, absolute
immunity does not necessarily apply to all actions that a
prosecutor may take once the 'judicial phase' begins."); Guzman-
Rivera, 55 F.3d at 29 (observing that absolute prosecutorial
immunity does not "extend[] to all conduct that facilitates the
prosecutorial function"). As the Supreme Court has emphasized,
"the actions of a prosecutor are not absolutely immune merely
because they are performed by a prosecutor." Buckley, 509 U.S.
at 273. Rather, under the functional approach, Kaczmarek's
defense turns on the following question: was Kaczmarek functioning
as Farak's prosecutor when she withheld evidence from Penate's
proceeding? See id. at 277 (asking whether the prosecutor's
7 The Supreme Court held in Van de Kamp v. Goldstein, 555
U.S. 335 (2009), that prosecutors were entitled to absolute
immunity for supervising their office's compliance with
constitutional disclosure requirements. Id. at 348. As Kaczmarek
did not work in or otherwise have control over the office of the
DA prosecuting Penate, her claim to absolute prosecutorial
immunity does not come under the rubric of Van de Kamp. See id.
at 345.
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conduct had any "functional tie to the judicial process"); Burns,
500 U.S. at 495 (asking whether "the prosecutor's actions are
closely associated with the judicial process" the prosecutor
initiated).
Key facts alleged in the complaint answer that question
in the negative. The most significant fact is that Kaczmarek
turned over the mental health worksheets to Farak's defense. This
shows that, when Kaczmarek orchestrated the withholding of that
very same evidence in Penate's case, she did not do so because
keeping the evidence under wraps was helpful to her prosecution of
Farak. On the complaint's facts, we conclude jurors could find
that Kaczmarek's decisions about disclosure of evidence in
Penate's case were not made based on her role as Farak's
prosecutor. The absence of this "functional tie" between
Kaczmarek's prosecutorial duties and her conduct in Penate's case,
if proven, would doom Kaczmarek's assertion of absolute
prosecutorial immunity. Buckley, 509 U.S. at 277.
The ties Kaczmarek points to do not show that she
withheld evidence in Penate's case as part of her advocacy in
Farak's case. Kaczmarek emphasizes that her involvement in
Penate's case occurred "in the midst of her criminal prosecution"
of Farak. But, as we have already explained, the functional
approach and the principle that prosecutorial immunity is not
coextensive with the judicial phase of the criminal process require
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that determinations about immunity turn not on accidents of timing
but on careful analyses of the functions being performed.
Kaczmarek also stresses that her "obligations" to Penate
"arose solely because of her . . . role as Farak's prosecutor."
Kaczmarek possessed the evidence at issue because she was Farak's
prosecutor, "but that connection is too tenuous" to show that
Kaczmarek functioned as a prosecutor when she withheld the evidence
from Penate's case. Lampton v. Diaz, 639 F.3d 223, 227 (5th Cir.
2011); see also id. at 227-28 (denying immunity for prosecutor's
disclosure of tax records acquired during prosecution to state
ethics board); Yarris v. Cty. of Delaware, 465 F.3d 129, 137-38
(3d Cir. 2006) (denying absolute prosecutorial immunity to
prosecutors who withheld evidence in post-conviction proceedings
assigned to other prosecutors, even though the prosecutors had
acquired the evidence at issue through their roles as prosecutors
in the initial criminal proceedings); Guzman-Rivera, 55 F.3d at 29
("The prosecutorial nature of an act does not spread . . . like an
inkblot, immunizing everything it touches.").
Kaczmarek's final attempt to cast her function in
Penate's case as entitled to prosecutorial immunity, based on Reid
v. New Hampshire, 56 F.3d 332 (1st Cir. 1995), misses because it
trains its sights on Kaczmarek's conduct rather than on her
function. The prosecutors in Reid enjoyed absolute immunity from
claims that they intentionally withheld evidence while trying the
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plaintiff on criminal charges. Id. at 337; see also Campbell v.
Maine, 787 F.2d 776, 778 (1st Cir. 1986) (per curiam) (same).
Kaczmarek argues that she is entitled to immunity just the same
because, like the prosecutors in Reid, she "used her discretion to
evaluate" the evidence at issue and to determine that the evidence
was "irrelevant" to Penate.
But Reid explained that absolute immunity attaches "when
a prosecutor evaluates evidence and interviews witnesses in
preparation for trial," 56 F.3d at 337 (citing Buckley, 509 U.S.
at 273), and that one aspect of this immunity-protected function
is "determin[ing] what evidence . . . [i]s exculpatory and subject
to disclosure" to the defense, id.; see also Warney v. Monroe Cty.,
587 F.3d 113, 125 (2d Cir. 2009) ("[T]he disclosure of [Brady]
evidence to opposing counsel is an advocacy function."); Imbler,
424 U.S. at 431 n.34 (analogizing withholding exculpatory evidence
to a prosecutor's use of perjured testimony during trial). Reid's
holding thus rested not on "the act itself" -- analyzing
potentially exculpatory evidence -- but on "the nature and function
of the act" -- analyzing evidence in preparation to present the
state's case. Mireles, 502 U.S. at 13 (internal quotation marks
omitted); see also Buckley, 509 U.S. at 276 n.7 (confirming that
immunity for "obtaining, reviewing, and evaluating evidence"
depends on whether those actions were taken in an "administrative"
or prosecutorial capacity (quoting Imbler, 424 U.S. at 431 n.33)).
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That police are afforded qualified immunity from Brady
claims further illustrates that the function for which the evidence
is analyzed, not the act of analyzing potentially exculpatory
evidence, controls the type of immunity. See Drumgold v.
Callahan, 707 F.3d 28, 38 (1st Cir. 2013) (denying claim of
qualified immunity by police officer for suppression of evidence).
Indeed, the operative allegations in Count IV of the complaint
allege that Kaczmarek withheld Brady material, as a police officer
might, by "concealing Brady material," from the court where Penate
was tried and from Penate's prosecutor.
Finally, the functional tie present in Reid is absent
here: we have already concluded that Kaczmarek's decisions to
withhold evidence in Penate's case were not, on the facts alleged,
an aspect of her preparation to present the state's case against
Farak. In short, Kaczmarek does not enjoy absolute prosecutorial
immunity from Penate's suit because of her role as Farak's
prosecutor.
C. Absolute Immunity of Government Attorneys
The next issue is Kaczmarek's theory that she enjoys
absolute immunity because she was a government attorney performing
an advocacy function when she advised Foster on the AGO's responses
to the Ballou subpoena and to the subsequent court order requiring
disclosure of documents.
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This theory of immunity is derived from Butz v. Economou,
438 U.S. 478 (1978), which held that "agency officials" enjoy
absolute immunity in "performing certain functions analogous to
those of a prosecutor," including "initiat[ing] administrative
proceedings" and "presenting evidence in an agency hearing." Id.
at 515-16. Butz itself involved claims against, among others, a
Department of Agriculture attorney who had brought an
administrative enforcement proceeding against the plaintiff. Id.
at 482.
Kaczmarek cites to out-of-circuit cases extending Butz
to officials appointed to initiate civil proceedings for the
government or to defend the government in civil proceedings.8 See,
e.g., Schrob v. Catterson, 948 F.2d 1402, 1413 (3d Cir. 1991)
(initiating a civil forfeiture proceeding)); Murphy v. Morris, 849
F.2d 1101, 1105 (8th Cir. 1988) (defending government in a civil
suit); Barrett v. United States, 798 F.2d 565, 572-73 (2d Cir.
1986) (same).9 She argues that these cases and Butz hold that
8 This circuit has not extended Butz to government
attorneys outside the administrative context. We have granted
absolute immunity to, for example, members of a state medical
licensing board in initiating a licensure revocation proceeding,
Wang v. N.H. Bd. of Registration in Med., 55 F.3d 698, 701 (1st
Cir. 1995), and to officers at a state insurance bureau in deciding
to settle a violation through consent agreement rather than
administrative proceeding, Knowlton v. Shaw, 704 F.3d 1, 6 (1st
Cir. 2013).
9 Kaczmarek likens herself to state government attorneys
granted immunity by the Second Circuit in Barrett for their
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"government attorneys who are not formally designated as
prosecutors are also entitled to absolute immunity when their
function is intimately associated with the judicial process."
That reading is undoubtedly too broad. Butz involved agency
attorneys with assigned roles in a quasi-judicial administrative
proceeding. And the out-of-circuit cases involved attorneys
appointed to represent the government in initiating or defending
a civil proceeding. No case has extended absolute immunity to a
government attorney like Kaczmarek for merely assisting, behind
the scenes, in a state's response to a court request for documents.
And we do not believe that such an extension is "necessary to
protect the judicial process." Burns, 500 U.S. at 485.
But, even assuming that Butz immunity were as broad as
Kaczmarek argues it is, her theory would fail on its own terms.
The facts alleged in the complaint do not support it. See Odd v.
Malone, 538 F.3d 202, 208 (3d Cir. 2008) (emphasizing the "fact-
intensive nature" of the functional approach to absolute
immunity).
To recap the basic events, the subpoena duces tecum
received by Ballou "command[ed] the production of all documents
assignment to defend the state in a civil suit filed in state
court. 798 F.2d at 573. But that holding does not encompass
Kaczmarek's claim to immunity. As we have already explained,
Kaczmarek did not represent the DA in the Penate prosecution.
And, as we will explain, Kaczmarek was not the AGO's designee to
respond to the discovery requests.
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and photographs pertaining to the investigation of Sonja Farak and
the Amherst Drug Lab." Later, the judge ordered Ballou to produce
any previously undisclosed evidence in his file. Foster was the
AGO attorney responsible for handling the AGO's answers to the
subpoena and court order. She had conversations with Kaczmarek
and others in the course of formulating these responses.
As we read the core facts alleged in the complaint, in
these conversations with Foster, Kaczmarek primarily functioned as
a custodian of evidence. This is an administrative function not
"analogous" to the advocacy of a prosecutor, Butz, 438 U.S. at
515, nor otherwise intimately associated with the judicial
process,10 see Odd, 538 F.3d at 213 (denying claim of absolute
immunity for a "primarily administrative" function); see also,
e.g., Knowlton v. Shaw, 704 F.3d 1, 5 (1st Cir. 2013) ("Absolute
immunity . . . is not available to . . . officials whose actions
are primarily administrative . . . ."); Perez v. Ellington, 421
F.3d 1128, 1133 (10th Cir. 2005) ("Absolute immunity does not
10 Kaczmarek also argues, relying on Van de Kamp, that she
is absolutely immune because she advised Foster, whom the district
court found to be absolutely immune, see Penate, 2018 WL 6437077,
at *14. Van de Kamp, however, granted immunity to supervisors of
prosecutors and to the prosecutor's "colleagues" who shared an
"intimate[] association with the judicial phase of the criminal
process." See 555 U.S. at 345-46. Kaczmarek was not Foster's
supervisor. And our conclusion that Kaczmarek could be found not
to have shared such an association with the judicial phase of the
criminal process distinguishes her from the hypothetical
colleagues the Supreme Court deemed immune in Van de Kamp.
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extend to actions 'that are primarily investigative or
administrative in nature' . . . ." (quoting Pfeiffer v. Hartford
Fire Ins. Co., 929 F.2d 1484, 1490 (10th Cir. 1991)).
That Kaczmarek acted as an evidence custodian is
consistent first of all with the AG's own description of its role
in Penate's proceeding. The AGO represented to the state court
evaluating Penate's motion for a new trial that the AG was "not
the prosecutor" of Penate's case. Instead, the AG stated that,
in responding to the subpoena and court order, it had been a
"non-party from which the defendants . . . sought . . .
discovery." "In that capacity," the AGO claimed to have acted "as
any other non-party might." Our characterization of Kaczmarek's
function follows from this admission by the AG that it was "not
the prosecutor" but rather a non-party simply providing requested
evidence.
Other key facts alleged confirm this characterization as
to Kaczmarek herself. Kaczmarek's role in the AG's Enterprise and
Major Crimes Unit was to prosecute crimes. A different unit, the
Appeals Division, where Foster worked, handled the AGO's responses
to subpoenas. Kaczmarek, in other words, was involved in the
response to the subpoena and court order only because she was the
person familiar with the materials requested. The complaint thus
alleges that Kaczmarek's primary role was to inform Foster about
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the existence, or non-existence, of responsive documents among
those materials.
In performing this role, Kaczmarek "serv[ed] the same
non-adversarial function as police officers . . . and other
clerical state employees" able to identify and describe evidence
in government possession. Yarris, 465 F.3d at 138 (holding that
former prosecutors who stonewalled requests to test evidence acted
not like prosecutors entitled to absolute immunity but as
"custodian[s] of evidence"). This function, whether performed by
a government lawyer like Kaczmarek or by a police officer, is an
administrative one, not analogous to the advocacy of a prosecutor,
nor otherwise closely associated with the judicial process. See
id. at 137-38.
The administrative nature of this role here is further
apparent in the nature of the subpoena and order. The subpoena
requested all relevant documents and the order any previously
undisclosed documents. Informing Foster whether documents
responsive to such explicit orders existed among the Farak
materials did not require advocacy by Kaczmarek. In this, our
view is consistent with Odd v. Malone, 538 F.3d at 213 (Hardiman,
J.), which held that a prosecutor responsible for "informing the
court about the status of a detained witness" was performing an
administrative function. Id. at 213. There, too, the function's
administrative nature was "especially" clear "in light of" the
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fact that the court's order requesting the information was
"explicit." Id.
To the extent Kaczmarek did use discretion or legal
knowledge in advising Foster, that does not change our conclusion
that Kaczmarek's primary function was an administrative one not
entitled to absolute government attorney immunity. As we
explained in the previous section, it is the function for which
evidence is evaluated, not the act of analyzing evidence itself
which controls the type of immunity. And, here, the complaint
alleges that Kaczmarek's primary function in analyzing the Farak
materials was an administrative one -- to inform Foster whether
those materials were responsive.
III.
The district court's denial of the motion to dismiss is
affirmed.
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