NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
File Name: 22a0460n.06
Case No. 22-3100
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
FILED
) Nov 16, 2022
TERRY CASKEY, DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
)
Plaintiff - Appellee, )
)
v. ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED
)
STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE
)
NATHAN FENTON, et al., SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO
)
Defendants - Appellants. )
OPINION
)
)
Before: COLE, GIBBONS, and BUSH, Circuit Judges.
JULIA SMITH GIBBONS, Circuit Judge. Terry Caskey filed a complaint under 42 U.S.C.
§ 1983 against the City of Columbus and Officers Nathan Fenton and Charles R. Harshbarger.
Caskey alleged seizure without probable cause and malicious prosecution against the officers, as
well as a state law claim of malicious prosecution against the officers and the city. The district
court granted summary judgment for the City of Columbus but denied summary judgment for
Fenton and Harshbarger, concluding that there were genuine issues of material fact that made it
improper to grant qualified immunity at the summary judgment stage. Fenton and Harshbarger
appeal the denial of summary judgment on qualified immunity grounds. We affirm.
I.
On November 11, 2018, Fenton and Harshbarger (“the officers”) were on patrol, driving a
prisoner transport vehicle (“PTV”) on the streets of Columbus, Ohio. Harshbarger was driving,
with Fenton in the passenger seat. The officers spotted a blue Nissan Altima (“Altima”), license
No. 22-3100, Caskey v. Fenton
plate HDU2365, stopping at the intersection ahead of them. The officers observed that one of the
Altima’s brake lights was not working. The driver did not signal to turn, but then quickly turned
at the intersection. At that point, the officers flashed their lights and briefly activated their sirens
“in order to conduct a traffic stop for the traffic violations of . . . Failing to Signal and . . . Motor
Vehicle Lights.” DE 57-1, Arrest Information Report, PageID 565. However, the vehicle did not
pull over. Id. The Altima slowed down for the next intersection, making a right-hand turn.
The parties dispute what happened next. The officers assert that, as the Altima was turning
right, they observed that the driver was “an older male, white, short hair and medium build,” whom
they later identified as Caskey. Id. However, Caskey claims that this is not possible as his
roommate, Robert Taliaferro, was driving that night, not Caskey. Taliaferro is 30 years younger
than Caskey, taller, and has darker hair. Caskey further argues that the officers could not have
seen the driver of the car at all, given the dark night and the officers’ distance from the vehicle.
The dashcam footage, though grainy, shows a dark night, with the driver’s seat of the Altima not
visible in the footage at any point, even in the timeframe where the officers allegedly saw Caskey’s
features most clearly.
Next, the officers reported that the Altima “quickly accelerate[d] into the furthest left hand
lane of vehicles . . . in order to flee from the officers.” Id. However, the footage does not show
any such rapid acceleration. Instead, the footage shows the Altima crossing over into the furthest
left-hand lane. At this point, the officers turned off their lights and sirens to end the pursuit but
continued to observe the Altima. They report that the Altima continued driving dangerously:
causing another car to “slam on its brakes . . . almost caus[ing] an accident” and then speeding
onto the highway at a rate of “around 90 [mph] in a 55 mph zone . . . during which there was a
heavy flow of traffic.” Id. at 566. Caskey characterizes the footage as less extreme. He argues
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No. 22-3100, Caskey v. Fenton
that the video shows the other car referenced by the officers slowing down and braking but does
not show a near accident as described in the report.
After ending the pursuit, the officers looked up the vehicle information and found that the
Altima was registered to Terry Caskey. They then pulled up Caskey’s photograph in the Ohio
Law Enforcement Gateway (“OHLEG”) and determined that he was “the same older male, white,
short hair and medium build they witnessed driving.” DE 57-1, Arrest Information Report, PageID
565. Caskey claims that the officers lied and relied solely on the OHLEG photo to establish
probable cause for his arrest. Later that night, Fenton prepared and submitted the police report,
which contained a request that a Franklin County Grand Jury indict Caskey for failure to comply
with an order or signal of a police officer.
The Franklin County Prosecutor’s Office presented the police report to a grand jury, and
the grand jury indicted Caskey. The officers did not testify before the grand jury. Instead, a police
liaison testified, basing his testimony on the arrest information provided in the officers’ report.
After the grand jury found probable cause and indicted Caskey, the County Prosecutor’s Office
requested issuance of a warrant on the indictment. On Thanksgiving Day 2018, Caskey was
arrested at his home by two unnamed police officers. He was incarcerated for five days and then
released on his own recognizance.
Upon returning home, Caskey confronted Taliaferro about the night of November 11, 2018,
and Taliaferro allegedly admitted to driving the Altima that night. Caskey recorded the
conversation with Taliaferro in two videos and submitted those videos, via his attorney, to the
Franklin County Prosecutor’s Office. Days later, Taliaferro moved out, and he and Caskey have
had no subsequent contact.
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On December 17, 2018, Caskey entered a not guilty plea. Four months later, the case was
dismissed due to “insufficient evidence to prove identification.” DE 58-7, Entry, PageID 664.
When asked in his civil deposition about any costs associated with dismissal of his case, Caskey
was at first unsure about whether he had to pay any court costs and then recalled paying court costs
to achieve dismissal of the case. Caskey later filed a motion to supplement the record to clarify
that he erred in his deposition testimony and had not paid anything to achieve dismissal. To
support this claim, he submitted his entire criminal file to demonstrate that there is no indication
that he paid costs to achieve dismissal of his case.
Caskey sued Fenton and Harshbarger under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for seizure without probable
cause and malicious prosecution. He also brought a malicious prosecution claim against the
officers under Ohio state law.1
Following discovery, both parties produced expert reports related to a central issue in the
case: whether Fenton and Harshbarger could see the face of the car’s driver. Caskey’s expert,
James Sobek, took pictures of cars at the intersection where the officers claimed they saw Caskey
driving to demonstrate that a driver could not have been seen from the officers’ location. He
asserted that the photographs were an approximate recreation of the circumstances under which
the officers claimed to have seen Caskey. Caskey also produced photos taken by a professional
photographer, Jim Shively, of a Nissan Altima from approximately the distance the officers sat
behind the Altima to demonstrate that the driver could not be seen. Fenton and Harshbarger’s
rebuttal expert, Officer David Cornute, refuted the evidence provided by Sobek, concluding that
more illumination of the Altima existed than claimed by Sobek and that the scene was bright
1
Caskey also sued the City of Columbus for the state law malicious prosecution claim under a
respondeat superior theory of liability, but the district court granted summary judgment for the
City and dismissed the City from the case.
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No. 22-3100, Caskey v. Fenton
enough for the officers to positively identify Caskey on November 11, 2018. Cornute also asserted
that Sobek’s underlying assumptions about the location of the lights on the PTV were incorrect,
leading to an erroneous conclusion about what the officers could see.
Caskey moved for summary judgment to deny the officers qualified immunity and the
officers moved for summary judgment to dismiss the claims based on their assertions of qualified
immunity. The officers argued that they were shielded by qualified immunity because Caskey
(1) failed to create a genuine issue of material fact for any constitutional rights violation and
(2) produced no fact pattern similar enough for the rights alleged to be “clearly established.” The
district court disagreed, determining that qualified immunity would not be appropriate at this stage
because, for each claim, a jury could find that Caskey’s rights were violated and those rights were
clearly established at the time of the violation. The district court also denied the parties’ cross-
motions for summary judgment because it concluded there were genuine issues of material fact
that needed to be resolved by a jury.
Fenton and Harshbarger now appeal the denial of their summary judgment motion.
II.
The denial of summary judgment is not normally a final appealable order under 28 U.S.C.
§ 1291, but a summary judgment denial of qualified immunity is immediately appealable “to the
extent that it turns on an issue of law.” Mitchell v. Forsyth, 472 U.S. 511, 530 (1985). Although
the district court framed its opinion as denying summary judgment because of genuine issues of
material fact, “[t]he district court’s characterization of the basis for its ruling is not dispositive.”
Stoudemire v. Mich. Dep’t of Corr., 705 F.3d 560, 564 (6th Cir. 2013) (citation omitted). Even
where the defendant tries to impermissibly rely on disputed facts on appeal, this court can ignore
the defendant’s attempts to dispute the facts and instead resolve any purely legal disputes. Est. of
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No. 22-3100, Caskey v. Fenton
Carter v. City of Detroit, 408 F.3d 305, 310 (6th Cir. 2005). Therefore, this court has jurisdiction
to review the legal issues at the heart of this case, even where the officers have relied on disputed
facts.
“Where jurisdiction is appropriate, we review de novo the denial of summary judgment on
the basis of qualified immunity.” Est. of Hill ex rel. Hill v. Miracle, 853 F.3d 306, 312 (6th Cir.
2017) (citation omitted). Summary judgment should be granted when there is no genuine dispute
of material fact, and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a).
When reviewing a summary judgment determination, we view the facts and reasonable inferences
in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party. See Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith
Radio Corp., 475 U.S. 574, 587 (1986). When there is video footage of an incident, we view the
facts “in the light depicted by the videotape.” Scott v. Harris, 550 U.S. 372, 381 (2007).
Generally, when a district court denies summary judgment because there are genuine issues
of material fact controlling the qualified immunity inquiry, there can be no interlocutory appeal of
that factual determination. Johnson v. Jones, 515 U.S. 304, 313 (1995). However, there is an
outer limit to that rule. Appellate review of whether a genuine dispute of material fact exists is
appropriate when the district court’s determination is so contradicted by the record that it is
“blatantly and demonstrably false,” see Bishop v. Hackel, 636 F.3d 757, 769 (6th Cir. 2011)
(citation omitted), and no jury could agree with it. See Scott, 550 U.S. at 380.
III.
The officers make both factual and legal challenges to the district court’s denial of qualified
immunity. Because the same factual arguments underpin all three of Caskey’s claims, we begin
with whether the key facts of Caskey’s case are beyond the possible findings of any reasonable
jury. We then address the officers’ qualified immunity arguments for each claim.
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No. 22-3100, Caskey v. Fenton
A.
A defendant who invokes a qualified immunity defense “may not appeal a district court’s
summary judgment order insofar as that order determines whether or not the pretrial record sets
forth a ‘genuine’ issue of fact for trial.” Johnson, 515 U.S. at 319-20; Wysong v. City of Heath,
260 F. App’x 848, 853 (6th Cir. 2008) (“[A] court of appeals, when hearing a qualified immunity
case on interlocutory review, does not have jurisdiction to disagree with a district court’s decision
that the record contains a factual dispute that must be resolved at trial.”). The only exception is
when the plaintiff’s version of events is so blatantly contradicted by the record, such as in a video
recording, that no reasonable jury could have believed her. Scott, 550 U.S. at 380.
The factual question for this court is whether, given the record evidence (including the
dashcam footage), Caskey’s version of events is so demonstrably false that no jury could agree
with him. The officers claim Caskey’s allegations are mere speculation, and the district court
therefore erred when determining that there was a genuine issue of material fact regarding key
facts underpinning Caskey’s claims. CA6 R. 20, Appellant Br., at 15, 18. These disputed facts
are: first, whether the officers made a positive identification of the Altima’s driver on November
11, 2018, and second, whether the officers knowingly or with reckless disregard for the truth made
false statements in the report. But if Caskey’s story is not blatantly contradicted by the record,
then we must defer to the district court’s determination that a genuine issue of material fact exists.
We address these key factual allegations in turn.
First, Caskey alleges that the officers could not see the driver’s seat of the Altima on the
night of November 11, 2018, to positively identify the driver. Here, Caskey’s version of events is
not contradicted by the record. In fact, the record somewhat supports it. At all times, the officers
were driving behind the Altima. The sun had set two hours before they spotted it. The officers
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No. 22-3100, Caskey v. Fenton
claim that they saw the driver when the Altima was making a right-hand turn, which meant that
the structure of the car shrouded him in shadow and placed him even further from the officers
trailing behind. Caskey’s experts and the photographic recreations they produce cast significant
doubt on the officers’ claim that they could positively identify the person driving the Altima.
Perhaps if the dashcam footage showed the face or even outline of the driver the record would
directly contradict Caskey’s claim that the officers could not see the driver. However, that is not
the record before us. We therefore defer to the district court’s determination that a genuine dispute
of material fact exists as to whether Fenton and Harshbarger positively identified the driver of the
Altima and, drawing the facts in the light most favorable to Caskey, assume that they could not.
Caskey’s next claim is that the officers knowingly or with reckless disregard for the truth
gave false information in their report. This claim is also not blatantly contradicted by the record.
It is not the role of this court to determine whether the officers lied. See Johnson, 515 U.S. at
316-17. Instead, we evaluate whether the claim that the officers lied is wholly contradicted by the
record. Because, as discussed above, it is possible that a jury could find that the officers did not
actually see the face of the driver, it is possible that jurors could conclude that the officers acted
with deliberate or reckless disregard for the truth regarding the driver’s identity when completing
their report. Furthermore, the discrepancies between the arrest report’s description of the events
of November 11, 2018, and the dashcam’s depiction of that night could lead a jury to believe that
the officers embellished the truth in multiple ways. For example, the officers reported that the
Altima “quickly accelerate[d] into the furthest left hand lane of vehicles . . . in order to flee from
the officers.” DE 57-1, Arrest Information Report, PageID 565. However, the footage does not
necessarily reflect such rapid acceleration. The officers also reported that the Altima caused
another car to “slam on its brakes . . . almost caus[ing] an accident.” DE 57-1, Arrest Information
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No. 22-3100, Caskey v. Fenton
Report, PageID 566. Instead, the video shows the other car slowing down and braking, but not the
near accident described in the report. It is possible that a reasonable jury would disregard these
observations and determine that the officers reported the events truthfully, but given the record,
we cannot say that it is the only conclusion they could reach.
Caskey’s version of events is not blatantly contradicted by the record. We therefore defer
to the district court’s determination that there exists a genuine dispute of material fact regarding
these key facts and draw inferences in the light most favorable to Caskey. For purposes of
determining whether Caskey’s constitutional rights were violated and whether those rights were
clearly established, we assume the officers could not see the driver of the Altima and made false
statements in their report with either knowing or reckless disregard for the truth. With these facts
settled, we now turn to his constitutional claims.
B.
Under the doctrine of qualified immunity, government officials are shielded from civil
liability unless their conduct violates clearly established constitutional rights. Harlow v.
Fitzgerald, 457 U.S. 800, 818 (1982). A defendant is entitled to summary judgment on qualified
immunity grounds unless the facts, taken in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, would allow
a reasonable juror to find that the defendant violated a constitutional right and that that right was
clearly established. Webb v. United States, 789 F.3d 647, 659 (6th Cir. 2015).
1.
We begin with the constitutional prohibition on seizure without probable cause, sometimes
called “false arrest.” A person’s Fourth Amendment rights are violated when he or she is seized
without probable cause or pursuant to a judicial determination of probable cause premised on an
officer’s material misrepresentations to the court. Gregory v. City of Louisville, 444 F.3d 725, 758
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No. 22-3100, Caskey v. Fenton
(6th Cir. 2006). When a grand jury makes a finding of probable cause, the plaintiff must show
that the officers who created the report (1) “knowingly and deliberately, or with reckless disregard
for the truth, made false statements or omissions that created a falsehood” and (2) “such statements
or omissions were material, or necessary, to the finding of probable cause.” Sykes v. Anderson,
625 F.3d 294, 305 (6th Cir. 2010) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). A constitutional
violation has occurred if the falsehoods were necessary to the finding of probable cause, but not if
probable cause could have been independently established. See id.; Hill v. McIntyre, 884 F.2d
271, 275 (6th Cir. 1989).
Drawing the facts in the light most favorable to Caskey, Fenton and Harshbarger created a
report with false statements knowingly and deliberately or with reckless disregard for the truth.
As discussed above, Caskey alleges that Fenton and Harshbarger did not see features of the driver
of the Nissan Altima on November 11, 2018, and instead relied on the photo of Caskey they found
in OHLEG later that evening to manufacture the claim that Caskey was the driver they had seen.
If these false statements were necessary to the finding of probable cause, then Caskey has alleged
a constitutional violation of seizure without probable cause.
“Probable cause is defined as reasonable grounds for belief, supported by less than prima
facie proof but more than mere suspicion.” United States v. McClain, 444 F.3d 556, 562 (6th Cir.
2005) (quoting United States v. Ferguson, 8 F.3d 385, 392 (6th Cir. 1993)). “The belief of guilt
must be particularized with respect to the person to be . . . seized.” Maryland v. Pringle, 540 U.S.
366, 371 (2003). Determining probable cause is a “totality-of-the-circumstances approach” where
we consider whether the facts and circumstances that the officers were aware of at the time were
sufficient to believe that the individual committed an offense. Sykes, 625 F.3d at 306.
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The differences in the reasonable suspicion and probable cause standards are noted in the
vehicle registration context. In Kansas v. Glover, 140 S. Ct. 1183 (2020), the Supreme Court
established that running the plates of a car and finding that the owner has a suspended license
creates a “commonsense inference” that the registered owner is likely the driver and “g[ives] rise
to reasonable suspicion,” allowing for a traffic stop. Id. at 1188. The Court explained that
reasonable suspicion is a “less demanding standard” than probable cause, so it can be established
“with information that is different in quantity or content,” such as commonsense inferences. Id.
The Supreme Court implicitly asserts in Glover what seems a natural conclusion: determining the
registered owner of a vehicle has committed a crime, without information confirming or negating
that the owner is the driver, can be grounds for reasonable suspicion, but not for probable cause.
Cf. McClain, 444 F.3d at 563 (“Speculation does not equate to probable cause.”).
Applying the probable cause standard to Caskey’s case reveals obvious deficiencies. The
probable cause determination made by the grand jury was premised entirely on the officers’ police
report. Absent the allegedly false statement that the officers saw the driver, the only remaining
fact to support probable cause is the fact that the car was registered to Caskey. But knowing that
the car was registered to Caskey provides reasonable suspicion that Caskey was the driver, not
probable cause that he committed a traffic violation. Because the report could not independently
support a finding of probable cause without including the allegedly false statements, Caskey has
shown that the officers’ false statements “were material, or necessary, to the finding of probable
cause.” Sykes, 625 F.3d at 305. Moreover, the officers agreed in their motion for summary
judgment that, “[i]f Defendant Officers had not verified the identification of the driver, they know
there would be no probable cause as to who was the driver.” DE 58, Mot. Summ. J., PageID 635.
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No. 22-3100, Caskey v. Fenton
Drawing the facts in the light favorable to Caskey, probable cause did not exist to support his
indictment and subsequent arrest.2
Fenton and Harshbarger raise a final challenge to Caskey’s claim of seizure without
probable cause regarding causation. The officers argue that they cannot be held liable for Caskey’s
seizure because they were not involved in the decision to seek the indictment on a warrant and
were not the officers who physically arrested Caskey. They explain that the chain of causation
between their report and Caskey’s arrest was broken by intervening actions taken by the grand jury
in indicting Caskey and the Franklin County Prosecutor’s Office in seeking the indictment on a
warrant, not on a summons. Although Fenton and Harshbarger wrote and submitted a police report
that “respectfully request[ed] the Grand Jury to indict” Caskey, they argue that they never
specifically requested that the indictment include the issuance of a warrant. According to them,
the Franklin County Prosecutor’s Office unilaterally decided to seek a warrant without input from
either officer. Assuming as we must that the officers made a report without probable cause that
led to a grand jury indictment of Caskey, we now examine whether the officers also needed to be
involved in the decision to issue a warrant for Caskey’s arrest to establish liability.
In law, “a man is responsible for the natural consequences of his acts.” Monroe v. Pape,
365 U.S. 167, 187 (1961) (Frankfurter, J., dissenting); Jones v. City of Chicago, 856 F.2d 985, 993
2
The officers urge a finding of probable cause because police officers are often forced to make
“split-second judgments” and courts must avoid substituting “personal notions of proper police
procedure for the instantaneous decision of the officer at the scene.” CA6 R. 20, Appellant Br., at
17-18. They contend that Caskey’s experts used “controlled,” “sanitized” circumstances to
demonstrate that the officers could not see the Altima’s driver, but that, under the threat of
“potential danger,” the officers’ eyesight could perform more effectively. Id. at 20. These
arguments stretch reason. Furthermore, the officers recorded their observations of the
identification of the driver after the officers had ended their pursuit—not in a split-second, urgent
scenario. Requiring truthful police reports without intentional or reckless falsehoods does not hold
officers to an overly sanitized or purely theoretical standard.
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No. 22-3100, Caskey v. Fenton
(7th Cir. 1988) (Posner, J.). Police officers are no exception to that rule: “[T]hey cannot escape
liability by pointing to the decisions of prosecutors or grand jurors . . . to confine or prosecute [the
plaintiff]. They cannot hide behind the officials whom they have defrauded.” Sykes, 625 F.3d at
317 (citing Jones, 856 F.2d at 994). Indeed, when a police officer makes a false or misleading
statement, he “may be liable for consequences caused by reasonably foreseeable intervening
forces.” Id. at 316 (citing Higazy v. Templeton, 505 F.3d 161, 177 (2nd Cir. 2007)). As Sykes
implies, decisions of prosecutors are a natural kind of “reasonably foreseeable intervening force”
even after an officer hands them the reins of an investigation. “[T]he chain of causation need not
be considered broken . . . if [the officer] deceived the subsequent decision maker, or could
reasonably foresee that his misconduct would contribute to an independent decision that results in
a deprivation of liberty.” Id. (quoting Higazy, 505 F.3d at 177) (alterations omitted).
A grand jury indictment resulting from a police report does not change the calculus.
“Police officers cannot, in good faith, rely on a judicial determination of probable cause [to absolve
them of liability] when that determination was premised on an officer’s own material
misrepresentations to the court.” Gregory, 444 F.3d at 758. False or misleading statements have
consequences, and the officers who make them must bear responsibility. The chain of causation
is not broken by “a prosecutor’s decision to charge, a grand jury’s decision to indict, a prosecutor’s
decision not to drop charges but proceed to trial—none of these decisions will shield a police
officer who deliberately supplied misleading information that influenced the decision.” Jones, 856
F.2d at 985.
A prosecutor’s decision to seek an indictment on a warrant rather than a summons runs
parallel to these examples. Such a decision is reasonably foreseeable by police officers,
particularly when they seek the indictment of a person whom they claim created a danger to the
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No. 22-3100, Caskey v. Fenton
public. Taking the facts as Caskey presents, the officers provided misleading, incorrect, or
intentionally false information in their report, which formed the entire basis for the grand jury
indictment, thereby creating an unbroken chain of causation between their misrepresentations and
Caskey’s arrest.
When officers knowingly, deliberately, or recklessly make false statements necessary to
establish probable cause for an arrest, they are liable for seizure without probable cause under
42 U.S.C. § 1983. The record supports a finding that Fenton and Harshbarger at least recklessly
made false statements that were necessary to the grand jury’s finding of probable cause. The
officers encouraged a grand jury indictment and knew it was possible that the indictment, if
returned, could be issued on a warrant. Therefore, a reasonable jury could conclude that Fenton
and Harshbarger seized Caskey without probable cause, in violation of Caskey’s Fourth
Amendment rights.
2.
Finding a possible constitutional violation, we turn to whether the constitutional right was
“so clearly established when the acts were committed that any officer in the defendant’s position,
measured objectively, would have clearly understood that he was under an affirmative duty to have
refrained from such conduct.” Bouggess v. Mattingly, 482 F.3d 886, 894 (6th Cir. 2007) (citation
omitted). Finding a right to be “clearly established” demands more than constitutional generalities.
Although there are rare, “obvious” cases where a right is “clearly established” without a body of
case law behind it, usually we require similar factual cases to put the officer on notice of the right.
Brosseau v. Haugen, 543 U.S. 194, 199 (2004). Courts should not define clearly established law
at a high level of generality, but the law does not require a case directly on point for a right to be
clearly established. Kisela v. Hughes, 138 S.Ct. 1148, 1152 (2018). “[J]ust as a court can
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No. 22-3100, Caskey v. Fenton
generalize too much, it can generalize too little. If it defeats the qualified-immunity analysis to
define the right too broadly . . . it defeats the purpose of § 1983 to define the right too narrowly.”
Hagans v. Franklin Cty. Sheriff’s Off., 695 F.3d 505, 508-09 (6th Cir. 2012). Regardless of the
standard of generality required to make seizure without probable cause “clearly established,”
Caskey meets it.
Officers lying about the basis for probable cause is the kind of “obvious” rights violation
that does not demand a catalog of factually similar cases. “[A] reasonable police officer would
know that fabricating probable cause, thereby effectuating a seizure, would violate a suspect’s
clearly established Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable seizures.” Spurlock v.
Satterfield, 167 F.3d 995, 1006 (6th Cir. 1999); Webb v. United States, 789 F.3d 647, 667 (6th Cir.
2015). It has long been the practice of this court to define the right to be free from seizure without
probable cause at a high level of generality. See, e.g., Radvansky v. City of Olmsted Falls, 395
F.3d 291, 310 (6th Cir. 2005) (declining to review other cases for factual similarity and finding
that the right to be free from arrest without probable cause is clearly established when an officer
arrests someone without probable cause); Courtright v. City of Battle Creek, 839 F.3d 513, 522-23
(6th Cir. 2016) (same); D.D. v. Scheeler, 645 F. App’x 418, 427 (6th Cir. 2016) (same). The lack
of a precise factual match requirement in this context makes sense for several reasons. First, the
underlying motivation for rights to be clearly established is to put officers on notice of the contours
of wrongful conduct. See Anderson v. Creighton, 483 U.S. 635, 640 (1987). Asking officers to
only report what they have seen, observed, or learned, and to refrain from intentionally lying or
recklessly stating falsehoods to establish probable cause does not offend this principle by providing
inadequate guidance. An officer does not need to be on notice of a specific kind of lie he is
prohibited from telling. Additionally, “[s]ome personal liberties are so fundamental to human
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No. 22-3100, Caskey v. Fenton
dignity as to need no specific explication in our Constitution in order to ensure their protection
against government invasion.” Brannum v. Overton Cnty. Sch. Bd., 516 F.3d 489, 499 (6th Cir.
2008); see also Mathis & Sons, Inc. v. Kentucky Transp. Cabinet, 738 F. App’x 866, 869-70 (6th
Cir. 2018) (applying this principle to a § 1983 claim of racial discrimination). Seizure without
probable cause, where the seizure is effected because of deliberately or recklessly made falsehoods
by government officials, is the rare, “obvious” kind of claim where the conduct is so wrong that
the general rule clearly establishes the right.
Even if the law required factual similarity for seizure without probable cause, it exists here.
In Stillwagon v. City of Delaware, we found a clearly established seizure without probable cause
when a police officer in Columbus had insufficient information at the time of the arrest to support
probable cause and he instead made false statements and purposeful omissions to paint a picture
of felonious assault related to a road rage traffic incident-turned-fight. 747 F. App’x 361, 370 (6th
Cir. 2018). This situation bears remarkable similarity to the present case where two Columbus
police officers allegedly had insufficient information about the identity of the driver committing
traffic violations to establish probable cause, instead making false statements to develop probable
cause for the indictment of the car’s registered owner. If a jury agrees with Caskey on the facts,
then Fenton and Harshbarger’s deliberate or reckless false statements constitute a violation of
Caskey’s clearly established right against seizure without probable cause as illustrated in
Stillwagon.
Fenton and Harshbarger fail to successfully assert a different view of what must be “clearly
established” to prove liability. They argue Caskey must show a case where “officers that observe
an individual fleeing from them in a dangerous manner, who stopped pursuing in order to avoid
harm to themselves and the community, then believed they positively identified the individual, and
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No. 22-3100, Caskey v. Fenton
requested an indictment, has violated that individual’s rights.” CA6 R. 20, Appellant Br., at 22.
The officers’ proposed standard fails in two ways. First, the scenario they portray does not take
the facts in the light most favorable to Caskey, as required at the summary judgment stage.
Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co., 475 U.S. at 587. Second, their requested scenario reaches a level of
specificity that defies the Supreme Court’s instruction that factual scenarios need not be identical
to put officers on notice of the rights violation caused by their conduct. Kisela, 138 S.Ct. at 1152.
The officers also argue that they avoid liability because Caskey has not made “a substantial
showing” that the officers made false statements recklessly or deliberately. They argue that prior
cases of false arrest and malicious prosecution claims relied on stronger evidence—what they
deem a “substantial showing”—that the officers had made false statements deliberately or
recklessly. However, the officers misconstrue the height of this requirement. We have explained
that a “substantial showing” of a deliberate or reckless falsehood requires that plaintiffs support
their claims with “an offer of proof.” Butler v. City of Detroit, 936 F.3d 410, 418 (6th Cir. 2019).
As discussed above, there is more than enough evidence here for a jury to conclude that the officers
deliberately or recklessly lied in their report. Because a reasonable jury could find that the officers
seized Caskey without probable cause, and that violation was “clearly established” under our
precedent, we affirm the district court’s denial of summary judgment.
C.
Turning to Caskey’s § 1983 malicious prosecution claim, we return to qualified immunity’s
two-prong test and begin with the constitutional violation.
1.
The Fourth Amendment guarantees the right to be free from unjust prosecution. Jackson
v. City of Cleveland, 925 F.3d 793, 820 (6th Cir. 2019). This separate, constitutionally cognizable
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No. 22-3100, Caskey v. Fenton
claim is “entirely distinct” from the claim of false arrest or seizure without probable cause. Sykes,
625 F.3d at 308 (citation omitted). The tort of malicious prosecution remedies injuries associated
not with the absence of legal process, but with the wrongful institution of legal process. Id. There
are four elements to a malicious prosecution claim under § 1983: (1) a criminal prosecution was
initiated against the plaintiff and the defendant “made, influenced, or participated in the decision
to prosecute”; (2) there was a lack of probable cause for the criminal prosecution; (3) as a
consequence of a legal proceeding, the plaintiff suffered a deprivation of liberty apart from the
initial seizure; and (4) the criminal proceeding was resolved in the plaintiff’s favor. Id. at 308-09.
Despite the name, “malice” is not required to show malicious prosecution under § 1983. Id. at
309. Here, the third element is conceded by the officers, so we only consider the first, second, and
fourth elements.
The first element of malicious prosecution “is met when an officer ‘could reasonably
foresee that his misconduct would contribute to an independent decision that results in a
deprivation of liberty’ and the misconduct actually does so.” Jackson, 925 F.3d at 820 (citing
Sykes, 625 F.3d at 316). In a closely analogous case, this court held that an officer who made
“affirmative misrepresentations and omissions in his arrest-warrant application and investigative
report” which “clearly led to the Plaintiffs’ arrests” had participated or influenced the decision to
prosecute and could be held liable for malicious prosecution. Sykes, 625 F.3d at 314. In Sykes,
subsequent acts taken by independent decisionmakers like the prosecutor’s office did not alter this
conclusion because the officer “reasonably could have foreseen that by providing false information
to the prosecution that bore directly on whether there was probable cause to believe that the
Plaintiffs committed a crime, his misconduct could result in not only the Plaintiffs’ initial seizure
but also their eventual incarceration.” Id. at 314-15. Furthermore, providing false information
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No. 22-3100, Caskey v. Fenton
essential to the determination of probable cause can constitute “participating in” or “influencing”
the decision to prosecute even when the officers do not testify at the grand jury hearing or at trial.
See generally, Jackson, 925 F.3d at 825-27.
Applying the first element to Caskey’s case is straightforward. We have concluded that a
reasonable jury could determine that the officers gave false information in their report which was
necessary to the probable cause determination by the grand jury and Caskey’s subsequent arrest.
We have further concluded that it would be reasonably foreseeable to a police officer that making
false statements amounting to probable cause and then seeking an indictment based on those
falsehoods could result in an independent decisionmaker, like the prosecutor, seeking an
indictment on a warrant. Because the decision to indict on a warrant was a reasonably foreseeable
outcome from the alleged misconduct and resulted in a deprivation of Caskey’s liberty, the record
supports a finding that Fenton and Harshbarger participated in or influenced the decision to
prosecute Caskey.
Second, the record could support a finding that probable cause did not exist to prosecute
Caskey. A grand jury indictment creates a presumption of probable cause for purposes of
malicious prosecution. King v. Harwood, 852 F.3d 568, 587-88 (6th Cir. 2017). However, that
presumption is rebutted by a showing that “(1) a law-enforcement officer, in the course of setting
a prosecution in motion, either knowingly or recklessly made false statements . . . ; (2) the false
statements and evidence . . . [were] material to the ultimate prosecution of the plaintiff; and (3) the
false statements . . . [did] not consist solely of grand-jury testimony or preparation for that
testimony.” Id. All three prongs are satisfied here: the record supports conclusions that (1) Fenton
and Harshbarger knowingly or recklessly made false statements which were (2) necessary and
material to the indictment of Caskey, as probable cause could not have existed without them, and
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No. 22-3100, Caskey v. Fenton
(3) the allegedly false statements were contained in the police report, not just in the grand jury
testimony. See id. at 591 (explaining that false statements made in “laying the groundwork for an
indictment” are more than just preparation for grand jury testimony). Thus, a reasonable jury could
find there was no probable cause for Caskey’s criminal prosecution.
The fourth and final element of malicious prosecution is also satisfied because the criminal
proceeding was resolved in the plaintiff’s favor. “To demonstrate a favorable termination of a
criminal prosecution for purposes of the Fourth Amendment claim under § 1983 for malicious
prosecution, a plaintiff need only show his prosecution ended without a conviction.” Thompson
v. Clark, 142 S.Ct. 1332, 1335 (2022). Here, the officers acknowledge that, under the Supreme
Court’s newly articulated standard in Thompson, the dismissal of Caskey’s case meets the
definition of favorable termination.
Satisfying every factor, Caskey presented evidence to establish a constitutional violation
of malicious prosecution. However, the heart of the officers’ appeal on this claim is that the
violation was not clearly established at the time of Caskey’s arrest and prosecution and therefore
should be disregarded. We take up that issue now.
2.
Although the right to be free from malicious prosecution is clearly established, it is narrow.
Coffey v. Carroll, 933 F.3d 577, 591 (6th Cir. 2019). “A police officer violates a suspect’s clearly
established right to freedom from malicious prosecution under the Fourth Amendment only when
his deliberate or reckless falsehoods result in arrest and prosecution without probable cause.”
Johnson v. Moseley, 790 F.3d 649, 655 (6th Cir. 2015) (citation and quotation marks omitted).
Thus, a plaintiff must assert that an officer has participated in his prosecution by making deliberate
or reckless falsehoods where the officers and the prosecutor would have lacked probable cause
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No. 22-3100, Caskey v. Fenton
absent those falsehoods. Id. at 654-55; Miller v. Maddox, 866 F.3d 386, 395-96 (6th Cir. 2017).
After all, “[t]he specifics of the case only matter[] with respect to assessing the viability of the
malicious prosecution claim under the standard for summary judgment, not as a means of narrowly
defining the right at issue.” Jones v. Clark Cnty., 959 F.3d 748, 767 (6th Cir. 2020); see also
Gregory, 444 F.3d at 749-50; Spurlock, 167 F.3d at 1005. Furthermore, it has been “clearly
established” since before 1975 that “an officer need not testify” before a grand jury or at trial to
“participate in” or “influence” the decision to prosecute. Jackson, 925 F.3d at 826-27.
It is clearly established that officers violate the Constitution by knowingly or recklessly
making false statements that form probable cause for the plaintiff’s arrest and prosecution.
Gregory, 444 F.3d at 758-59 (finding a clearly established malicious prosecution claim where an
officer made factual omissions and testified in a preliminary hearing that the plaintiff fit the suspect
description given by a witness, despite the plaintiff’s several physical differences). In Caskey’s
case, it was therefore clearly established in November 2018 that the right to be free from malicious
prosecution extends to deliberate or reckless falsehoods that result in arrest and prosecution
without probable cause. See id. This standard includes deliberate falsehoods as well as omissions
and inconsistencies that evince a reckless disregard for the truth. The officers’ alleged behavior
reaches at least the kind of reckless disregard for the truth demonstrated in Gregory. This means
Fenton and Harshbarger were on notice that reckless or deliberate falsehoods providing probable
cause are actionable as a constitutional violation when they could reasonably and foreseeably lead
to arrest and prosecution.
Finally, the officers argue that the prosecutor’s dismissal of Caskey’s case was not clearly
established as “favorable termination” at the time of his arrest and prosecution. Newly articulated
in Thompson v. Clark, 142 S.Ct. 1332 (2022), the modern “favorable termination” standard
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No. 22-3100, Caskey v. Fenton
requires only that the plaintiff’s prosecution end without a conviction. Id. at 1335. However, the
officers contend that this precedent is too recent to be “clearly established” at the time of the facts
at issue in this case and therefore we must apply the “favorable termination” standard that existed
in 2018.
The officers are correct that Thompson contradicts this court’s approach, though
nonprecedential, that existed at the time of Caskey’s case. See Ohnemus v. Thompson, 594 F.
App’x 864, 867 (6th Cir. 2014); Jones, 939 F.3d at 763-65 (confirming the Ohnemus rule and its
reasoning in 2020); see also Restatement (Second) of Torts § 660. But the officers’ argument is
flawed in two ways: first, the rule in Thompson did not need to be “clearly established” at the time
of this case for its rule to apply; and second, even under our old standard, Caskey has shown
favorable termination.
The standard for favorable termination did not need to be “clearly established” at the time
of the wrongful conduct in order to support a malicious prosecution claim because it does not relate
to a government actor’s conduct subject to qualified immunity protections. The requirement that
a violation be “clearly established” exists to put government officials on notice of wrongful
conduct and protect officers acting in discretionary roles. District of Columbia v. Wesby, 138 S.
Ct. 577, 589-90 (2018). When determining whether a right is clearly established, we ask whether
the law was “sufficiently clear that every reasonable official would understand what he is doing is
unlawful.” Id. at 589 (emphasis added, quotation marks and citation omitted). When measuring
the moment when that right needed to be clearly established, we look at the state of the law “at the
time of the officer’s conduct.” Id.; Reichle v. Howards, 566 U.S. 658, 664 (2012). “This ‘clearly
established’ standard protects the balance between vindication of constitutional rights and
government officials’ effective performance of their duties by ensuring that officials can
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No. 22-3100, Caskey v. Fenton
reasonably anticipate when their conduct may give right to liability for damages.” Reichle, 566
U.S. at 664 (quotation marks and citation omitted).
In the context of malicious prosecution, the fourth element of “favorable termination”
involves no conduct or facet of conduct by officers because any actions have already occurred by
the time we consider how the prosecution concluded. It creates no additional notice for officers to
describe how the legal process must terminate to give rise to a malicious prosecution claim.
Buttressing this point is the question of when the element of favorable termination would have
needed to be established. There is no clear answer. The favorable termination element of
malicious prosecution need not be “clearly established” in order to bring a § 1983 claim.
Further, application of Thompson supports this view. In the wake of Thompson, sister-
circuits have applied its new, broader standard to cases where dismissal occurred under an older,
different standard, with no indication that the wrongful termination element fails to have been
“clearly established” at the time of conduct. See Coello v. DiLeo, 43 F.4th 346, 354 (3rd Cir.
2022); Smith v. City of Chicago, No. 19-2725, 2022 WL 2752603 (7th Cir. July 14, 2022). Nor
did the Supreme Court in Thompson make any indication that its new standard would fail the
“clearly established” prong on remand. 142 S. Ct. at 1341.
Even if our pre-Thompson standard applied, the officers’ argument would still fail.
Thompson abrogated and expanded the Sixth Circuit’s approach to the issue of favorable
termination. Before Thompson, and at the time of Caskey’s case, the rule (albeit nonprecedential)
was that “termination must go to the merits of the accused’s professed innocence for the dismissal
to be ‘favorable.’” Ohnemus, 594 F. App’x at 867. Determination of whether a termination was
favorable was a legal determination to be made by the trial court, unless factual disputes
surrounded the dismissal of the case. Id. at 866. The district court engaged in a factual inquiry to
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No. 22-3100, Caskey v. Fenton
determine whether the circumstances of a case’s dismissal indicated that the plaintiff was innocent
of the charges. Id. at 867. These circumstances included a “one-sided,” “unilateral decision of the
prosecutor to drop charges,” id. at 867, or when “conviction has, in the natural course of events,
become impossible or improbable.” Restatement (Second) of Torts § 660(a) cmt. d; see Ohnemus,
594 F. App’x at 867 (relying on § 660); Jones, 959 F.3d at 764 (same). Furthermore, it is generally
not a favorable termination if the defendant “bought peace” by paying a sum in exchange for
dismissal of criminal charges as a part of a deal or compromise. Ohnemus, 594 F. App’x at 867.
Here, the district court (performing its analysis pre-Thompson) correctly determined that
Caskey established a genuine dispute of material fact as to whether the prosecutor’s decision to
dismiss the charges was indicative of innocence. Drawing the facts in the light favorable to
Caskey, the record shows the prosecutor sought dismissal due to “insufficient evidence to prove
identification,” and Caskey claims that he shared with a prosecutor a video of Robert Taliaferro
admitting that he was the driver of the Altima on November 11, 2018. While competing evidence
exists about whether Caskey paid court costs associated with dismissal, this court does not balance
facts. We fulfill our role by concluding that the district court properly determined that a genuine
issue of material fact existed as to whether the circumstances surrounding the dismissal of
Caskey’s charges were indicative of innocence and whether Caskey paid court costs.
Under the facts pled, the district court correctly denied the officers’ motion for summary
judgment on Caskey’s § 1983 malicious prosecution claim.
IV.
Finally, we address Fenton and Harshbarger’s argument concerning Caskey’s state-law
malicious prosecution claim. The officers argue that there is no genuine issue of material fact for
each element of Caskey’s Ohio malicious prosecution claim and that the prosecution was not
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No. 22-3100, Caskey v. Fenton
terminated in Caskey’s favor under Ohio law. The elements of Ohio malicious prosecution overlap
substantially with the elements of its constitutional counterpart. Both require an absence of
probable cause and the termination of proceedings in the plaintiff’s favor, but Ohio’s malicious
prosecution law separately demands malice in instituting the prosecution. Trussel v. Gen. Motors
Corp., 559 N.E.2d 732, 734 (Oh. 1990). The officers claim that Caskey has failed to create a
genuine issue of material fact as to each of these three elements, but this argument is no more
convincing in the state-law context than in the § 1983 context. For two of these elements, we have
already shown there to be a genuine issue of material fact. The third element, malice, “may be
inferred from proof of lack of probable cause,” Rogers v. Barbera, 164 N.E.2d 162, 166 (Oh.
1960), which we have already determined a reasonable jury could find here.
The officers next argue that Caskey fails to show “favorable termination” for Ohio
malicious prosecution. However, the officers agree that that the standard for “favorable
termination” under Ohio law is the same as the pre-Thompson “favorable termination” standard in
the Sixth Circuit. See Ash v. Ash, 651 N.E.2d 945 (Oh. 1995) (“A proceeding is ‘terminated in
favor of the accused’ only when its final disposition indicates that the accused is innocent.”) (citing
Restatement (Second) of Torts § 660(a)). Therefore, our conclusion above that a reasonable jury
could find favorable termination for Caskey under his § 1983 malicious prosecution claim applies
equally to his state law claim.
Lastly, Fenton and Harshbarger suggest that the state-law violation was not “clearly
established” under Ohio immunity law. However, at no point in the appellate briefs or district
court record do the officers address the issue of Ohio’s immunity statute, much less provide
argument as to its legal application in this case. We therefore decline to address the issue here.
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No. 22-3100, Caskey v. Fenton
V.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court’s denial of summary judgment for
Officers Fenton and Harshbarger on all three of Caskey’s constitutional claims.
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