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[PUBLISH]
In the
United States Court of Appeals
For the Eleventh Circuit
____________________
No. 21-11255
____________________
BRYAN TURNER,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
versus
MIKE WILLIAMS,
as Sheriff of the City of Jacksonville and of Duval County,
MIKE WILLIAMS,
individually,
Defendants-Appellees.
____________________
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Middle District of Florida
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2 Opinion of the Court 21-11255
D.C. Docket No. 3:19-cv-00641-TJC-JRK
____________________
Before LAGOA, BRASHER, and TJOFLAT, Circuit Judges.
TJOFLAT, Circuit Judge:
Bryan Turner appeals the dismissal of his complaint under
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). Below, Turner alleged
Mike Williams, in his individual capacity and official capacity as
sheriff, violated his First Amendment rights and falsely arrested
him. Because probable cause existed to arrest Turner and his Sec-
ond Amended Complaint (the “Complaint”) has not sufficiently al-
leged that Williams otherwise retaliated against him for protected
speech, we affirm.
I.
A.
We recite the facts as stated in Turner’s Second Amended
Complaint, excluding the pleadings not entitled to the assumption
of truth due to their conclusory nature. See Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 556
U.S. 662, 679, 129 S. Ct. 1937, 1950 (2009).
“In or about 2008,” Turner retired from the Nassau County
Sheriff’s Office (the “NCSO”) after fourteen years as a deputy, hav-
ing obtained the rank of sergeant. Immediately upon retiring,
Turner accepted a similar position with the Jacksonville Sheriff’s
Office (the “JSO”). Though it is customary for retiring deputies to
be given a retired deputy identification card, Turner did not receive
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21-11255 Opinion of the Court 3
one from the NCSO due to a clerical error—an error he did not
attempt to redress because he was starting work as a deputy at the
JSO.
Bill Leeper was elected as the Nassau County Sheriff in 2012
and won reelection in 2016. While running for reelection in 2016,
Leeper announced he would not seek a third term as sheriff in 2020.
Having learned of the potential vacancy, Turner began communi-
cating to those at the NCSO and JSO, including Jacksonville Sheriff
Mike Williams, his intention to run for Nassau County Sheriff in
2020 against a candidate named Roy Henderson.
In the latter half of January 2017, Turner attended a political
event as Williams’s guest. At the event, Williams and Turner dis-
cussed Turner’s potential 2020 candidacy in Nassau County. Wil-
liams stated that Turner had “enough backing that [he] may win”
and prodded “repeatedly for a reason why [Turner] was running
against Henderson.”
B.
By early 2017, Turner had been employed by the JSO for
around nine years. Between his work at the two sheriff’s offices,
he had a combined ten years of experience working in narcotics
squads. In early February 2017, Turner was assigned to work un-
dercover as part of his narcotics squad work. The “standard proce-
dure was to pose as drug buyers and proceed to buy drugs on the
street” in “less affluent neighborhoods where the drug trade is
more prevalent.” “[A]lmost without exception[,] the undercover
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4 Opinion of the Court 21-11255
officers kept beer and cigarettes in their vehicles, items in the na-
ture of ‘props,’” when “interacting with buyers, sellers, and inform-
ants.”
On February 6, 2017, Turner was assigned to work overtime
as part of an undercover team to provide protection and training
for Kyle Kvies, a former patrol officer who was a rookie in under-
cover work. Turner, Kvies, and a third officer, Lance Griffis, rode
in an unmarked police Jeep Cherokee with Turner in the passenger
seat and Kvies in the back seat. Because the objective was to train
Kvies in undercover work, the team planned to “mak[e] contact
with someone from whom the team had previously bought drugs”
and buy a small amount of cocaine from him.
The team made contact with a potential seller. The seller
sat in the backseat and directed the team to where he could get
cocaine for them. The team brought the seller to an indicated lo-
cation. The seller exited the car, rounded a corner, then returned
saying that he could not close a deal here. The team then drove
the seller to a second location, ostensibly to try again. At the sec-
ond location, the seller got out of the Jeep Cherokee, leaving be-
hind a small bag of cocaine on the floor of the backseat of the car.1
The seller started walking away, turned around, and told Kvies
1 The seller apparently either had the cocaine when the team first made con-
tact with him or had, in fact, successfully purchased cocaine at the first loca-
tion.
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21-11255 Opinion of the Court 5
through the window, “looks like you dropped something,” thus ef-
fectuating a purchase.
As soon as the seller departed, an armed assailant ap-
proached the vehicle, and, from a few feet away, pointed a hand-
gun at Turner’s head. Turner glanced over the assailant’s shoulder
as a feint. While the assailant quickly looked to see what was be-
hind him, Turner unholstered his service weapon and fired multi-
ple times, killing the assailant. Due to the trauma of this officer-
involved shooting (“OIS”), Turner has an imperfect recollection of
the events that immediately followed the OIS.
Immediately after the OIS, all three of the undercover offic-
ers exited the vehicle to scan the area for other potential shooters.
And within twenty seconds of the OIS, Kvies began a recording on
his iPhone that documented him saying, “Hey, get all the beer,”
and Turner agreeing. Kvies then rounded up two unopened cans
and one opened bottle of beer that were in the Jeep Cherokee and
tossed them in a nearby yard.
Sometime after the disposal, a crowd of personnel from the
JSO arrived at the scene in response to the OIS. This group in-
cluded Turner’s lieutenant, Turner’s sergeant, and a lawyer from
the Fraternal Order of Police named William Vogalsang.
Vogalsang was there to protect Turner’s interests. The lieutenant
and sergeant asked Turner, “have y’all been drinking”? Turner re-
sponded, “no, but there is beer in the car.” When the lieutenant
and sergeant asked Kvies and Griffis about drinking, they did not
say that the car contained beer, nor that they had thrown away any
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6 Opinion of the Court 21-11255
beer props. Despite the car being within reach, it was not until the
next morning, when Kvies admitted to throwing away the beer,
that those in authority became aware that Turner incorrectly
stated there was beer in the car. After being questioned at the scene
of the OIS, Turner was brought into a police vehicle with the assis-
tant chief, who noted the lack of alcohol smell on Turner and
placed him on paid administrative leave pending an investigation
of the OIS.
C.
Around February 8, the Jeep Cherokee was issued to other
officers, who discovered the bag of cocaine from February 6 still on
the floor of the backseat.
Turner returned from administrative leave on February 16,
2017. He arrived at the Fraternal Order of Police office between
10:00 and 10:30 a.m. to meet with Vogalsang and give his statement
about the OIS. At this meeting, Vogalsang told Turner that “JAX
SHERIFF’s administration,” including Sheriff Williams, had dis-
cussed the potential of arresting the whole undercover team from
February 6 for tampering with evidence.
At around 11:00 a.m. that same day, the JSO Integrity Divi-
sion interviewed Turner—with Vogalsang present. During the in-
terview, “Vogalsang walked outside of the interview room with
the integrity sergeant, and was informed that warrants had already
been obtained for [Turner’s], Kvies’[s] and Griffis’s arrests,” charg-
ing them with tampering with evidence and conspiracy to tamper
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21-11255 Opinion of the Court 7
with evidence under Fla. Stat. §§ 918.13 and 717.04(3). 2 A detective
with the JSO Integrity/Special Investigations Unit had procured
the arrest warrants after obtaining the approval of an “[a]ssistant
[s]tate [a]ttorney” and the signature of a Duval County court
judge. 3
A JSO officer served Turner with the warrant that same day,
and Turner was “admitted to the jail” at 12:20 p.m. He was then
placed on administrative leave without pay and released on his
own recognizance. Kvies and Griffis were also arrested.
Roughly a week after the arrest, Ray Bullard, “a retired fire-
fighter who at that time held a part-time position with” the NCSO,
visited Turner at home. Bullard told Turner that Williams and
Henderson were close because Henderson had previously worked
as Williams’s supervisor at the JSO. He also intimated that he had
heard Henderson say that Henderson could not beat Turner in the
2 The Complaint alleges that sometime before the arrest warrants issued—
and possibly before the events of February 6—the JSO leadership and
Vogalsang met to decide to arrest Turner. It is unclear from the Complaint
when this meeting allegedly took place. Although it does state the meeting
occurred before there was probable cause to arrest Turner, the Complaint also
asserts there was never probable cause to arrest him. Therefore, that addi-
tional detail does little to timestamp the alleged meeting.
3 We take judicial notice that the assistant state attorney was a member of the
office of the State Attorney of the Fourth Circuit of Florida. The Fourth Cir-
cuit consists of Duval, Nassau, and Clay counties. According to the warrant
affidavit for the arrests of Turner, Kvies, and Griffis attached to the Complaint,
the judge who signed it was a judge of the County Court of Duval County.
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8 Opinion of the Court 21-11255
election, but that Williams would “take care of that.” Finally,
Bullard relayed that he had heard Henderson say that Williams and
Leeper were working together to scuttle Turner’s 2020 sheriff can-
didacy.
On August 31, 2017, an assistant state attorney announced
that he was declining to prosecute Turner. 4 Turner, however, was
told that upon returning from leave, he would be permanently as-
signed to teleserve (work a desk job) at the JSO. In response,
Turner resigned from the JSO and surrendered his state-issued law
enforcement certificate. The charges were dropped against the
other two undercover officers from February 6 in exchange for
their completion of community service hours. 5
4 Turner’s Complaint alleges that Turner was prosecuted, but Kvies and
Griffis were not. This is not true. According to the disposition notice attached
to the Complaint, Turner was not prosecuted. Rather, an assistant state attor-
ney declined to prosecute Turner six days before his scheduled arraignment.
Further, as discussed infra note 5, given that Kvies and Griffis were compelled
to complete community service, they may actually have gone further down
the path of prosecution than Turner did, even taking the facts as stated in the
Complaint.
5 Turner’s Complaint does not indicate who supervised Kvies’s and Griffis’s
community service. It is possible that someone at the JSO arranged commu-
nity service as a condition of withholding prosecution. But considering Kvies
and Griffis were both arrested, it is much more likely the community service
was either judicially supervised or arranged by the state attorney’s office. This
strikes us as more serious than Turner not being prosecuted at all.
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21-11255 Opinion of the Court 9
At some point after his arrest, Turner attempted to remedy
the clerical error with the NCSO from nine years earlier and obtain
a retired deputy identification card. Sheriff Leeper refused this re-
quest. On February 15, 2018, Turner requested the NCSO that he
complete a retirement shooting requalification so he could con-
tinue carrying a firearm. This request was also denied by an em-
ployee of the NCSO.
D.
Turner filed his original complaint in the Circuit Court for
Duval County, Florida. After Williams removed the case to the
District Court for the Middle District of Florida, 6 Turner amended
his complaint twice.
Turner’s original complaint asserted eight counts against
Williams and Leeper in their individual and official capacities and
contained 134 paragraphs of allegations.7 Williams, on June 13,
2019, and Leeper, on June 7, filed motions to dismiss this complaint
6 A defendant can remove a civil action from state court to a federal district
court where the federal court has original jurisdiction. 28 U.S.C. § 1441. Fed-
eral district courts have original jurisdiction to entertain civil actions arising
under laws of the United States such as 42 U.S.C. § 1983. 28 U.S.C. § 1331.
Where a district court has original jurisdiction over a federal question, it “shall
have supplemental jurisdiction over all other claims . . . [that] form part of the
same case or controversy.” Id. § 1367(a).
7 Each count in the original complaint adopted all of the allegations prior to
the first count, and every allegation within each count consisted of a legal con-
clusion.
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10 Opinion of the Court 21-11255
under Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, assert-
ing that the allegations of the complaint failed to satisfy the require-
ments of Twombly and Iqbal, 8 being replete with conclusory alle-
gations, and failed to give the defendants fair notice of the claims
and grounds upon which the claims rest as required by Rule 8(a). 9
Turner filed an amended Complaint on June 14 as a matter
of right. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(a)(1)(B). This version of the com-
plaint continued to assert eight counts against Williams and Leeper
in their individual and official capacities and contained 143 para-
graphs of allegations. 10 Williams and Leeper filed motions to dis-
miss this amended complaint under Rule 12(b)(6) as well, again as-
serting that the allegations of the complaint failed to satisfy the
8 Under the Twombly and Iqbal standard, “a court considering a motion to
dismiss can choose to begin by identifying pleadings that, because they are no
more than conclusions, are not entitled to the assumption of truth.” Ashcroft
v. Iqbal, 556 U.S. 662, 679, 129 S. Ct. 1937, 1950 (2009). After removing legal
conclusions from a pleading, “a plaintiff’s obligation to provide the ‘grounds’
of his ‘entitle[ment] to relief’ requires more than labels and conclusions[] and
a formulaic recitation of the elements of a cause of action” to form “[f]actual
allegations [that] raise a right to relief above the speculative level.” Bell Atl.
Corp. v. Twombly, 550 U.S. 544, 555, 127 S. Ct. 1955, 1964–65 (2007) (first
alteration in original).
9 Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 8(a) provides that “[a] pleading that states a
claim for relief must contain . . . a short and plain statement of the claim show-
ing that the pleader is entitled to relief.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 8(a)(2).
10 Again, each count in the first amended complaint adopted all of the allega-
tions prior to the first count, and, again, every allegation within each count
consisted of a legal conclusion.
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21-11255 Opinion of the Court 11
requirements of Twombly and Iqbal, being replete with conclusory
allegations, and failed to give the defendants fair notice of the
claims and grounds upon which the claims rest as required by Rule
8(a).
The District Court issued an order on the motions, finding
that Turner’s Complaint constituted a shotgun pleading due to its
lack of clarity and, in the alternative, that it did not state a claim for
relief. 11 But the Court granted Turner leave to file a second
amended complaint if he had a good faith basis for doing so.
Turner availed himself of this opportunity and filed a Second
Amended Complaint (the operative “Complaint” on appeal). This
Complaint asserts six counts against Williams and Leeper in their
individual and official capacities and contains 185 paragraphs of al-
legations.12 Each asserted count arises out of essentially the same
set of facts.
11 A dismissal on shotgun pleading grounds “is appropriate where ‘it is virtu-
ally impossible to know which allegations of fact are intended to support
which claim(s) for relief.’” Weiland v. Palm Beach Cnty. Sheriff’s Off., 792
F.3d 1313, 1325 (11th Cir. 2015) (emphasis in original) (quoting Anderson v.
Dist. Bd. of Trs. of Cent. Fla. Cmty. Coll., 77 F.3d 364, 366 (11th Cir. 1996));
see also T.D.S. Inc. v. Shelby Mut. Ins. Co., 760 F.2d 1520, 1543 n.14 (11th Cir.
1985) (Tjoflat, J., dissenting). That is not quite the case here.
12 Each count in the Second Amended Complaint still substantially adopts all
of the allegations prior to the first count, with minor exceptions. While the
Complaint does not quite adopt allegations in bulk, every allegation within
each count still consists of a legal conclusion.
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12 Opinion of the Court 21-11255
• Count One is a 42 U.S.C. § 1983 First Amendment claim al-
leging retaliation for engaging in speech against Williams in
his official capacity as Jacksonville Sheriff.
• Count Two is a § 1983 First Amendment claim alleging re-
taliation for engaging in speech against Williams in his indi-
vidual capacity.
• Count Three is a § 1983 First Amendment claim alleging re-
taliation for engaging in speech against Leeper in his official
capacity as Nassau County Sheriff.13
• Count Four is a civil conspiracy claim under Florida com-
mon law against Williams and Leeper in their individual ca-
pacities for allegedly violating Turner’s First Amendment
rights. 14
• Count Five is a false imprisonment/arrest claim under Flor-
ida common law against Williams in his official capacity.
• Count Six is a false imprisonment/arrest claim under Florida
common law against Williams in his individual capacity.
Williams and Leeper again filed motions to dismiss under
Rule 12(b)(6), still asserting that the allegations of the Complaint
13 This count is no longer live since Leeper is no longer a party.
14 Turner’s Complaint mentions a conspiracy action under 42 U.S.C. § 1985
but makes no allegations in reference to such a claim. Turner also does not
raise a § 1985 claim in his briefs on appeal, so we do not address it here.
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21-11255 Opinion of the Court 13
fail to satisfy the requirements of Twombly and Iqbal, again being
replete with conclusory allegations, and fail to give the defendants
fair notice of the claims and grounds upon which the claims rest as
required by Rule 8(a). Before obtaining a ruling on the motions to
dismiss, Turner and Leeper filed a joint stipulation, which the
Court accepted, dismissing the action against Leeper with preju-
dice, thus leaving only Williams in his individual and official capac-
ities as appellees here.
The District Court dismissed Turner’s Second Amended
Complaint with prejudice, finding the Complaint still fails to state
a claim under the Twobly and Iqbal standard and does not cure the
deficiencies that made the first amended complaint a shotgun
pleading. Turner appeals this order.
II.
We review de novo a district court’s dismissal of a complaint
for failure to state a claim under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure
12(b)(6). Echols v. Lawton, 913 F.3d 1313, 1319 (11th Cir. 2019).
“We accept the factual allegations in the [C]omplaint as true and
construe them in the light most favorable” to Turner. Id. (empha-
sis added) (citing Mills v. Foremost Ins. Co., 511 F.3d 1300, 1303
(11th Cir. 2008)). However, “the tenet that a court must accept as
true all of the allegations contained in a complaint is inapplicable
to legal conclusions.” Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 556 U.S. 662, 678, 129 S.
Ct. 1937, 1949 (2009). The alleged facts, having been stripped of all
legal conclusions, must make a claim for relief not merely possible,
but plausible. Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly, 550 U.S. 544, 570, 127 S.
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14 Opinion of the Court 21-11255
Ct. 1955, 1974 (2007). We require “more than labels and conclu-
sions,” id. at 555, 127 S. Ct. at 1965, and “[t]hreadbare recitals of the
elements of a cause of action, supported by mere conclusory state-
ments, do not suffice” to survive a Rule 12(b)(6) motion. Iqbal, 556
U.S. at 678, 129 S. Ct. at 1949. Further, “[w]here a complaint pleads
facts that are ‘merely consistent with’ a defendant’s liability, it
‘stops short of the line between possibility and plausibility of enti-
tlement to relief.’” Id. (internal quotations omitted) (quoting
Twombly, 550 U.S. at 557, 127 S. Ct. at 1966).
As noted supra, the Complaint is replete with “conclusory
statements” of fact and “legal conclusions.” 15 To review the
15 As an example, Count Four, like the other five counts, contains exclusively
legal conclusions except for the paragraph reincorporating the allegations pre-
ceding Count One:
164. This count sets forth claim against the Individ-
ual Defendants for civil conspiracy under the common law of
Florida.
165. The Individual Defendants acted as conspira-
tors to take actions against Plaintiff as set forth above. Thus,
the underlying actionable torts or other actions, which consti-
tuted the purposes of the conspiracy, include but are not lim-
ited to false arrest.
166. Alternatively, the Individual Defendants are li-
able for the tort of civil conspiracy, standing alone, based upon
the exceptional circumstances surrounding the facts of this
case which have led to the instant action.
167. The term of the conspiracy commenced prior
to Plaintiff’s wrongful arrest, and has been ongoing.
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21-11255 Opinion of the Court 15
sufficiency of the Complaint, we would have to strip it of these al-
legations and focus on the facts alleged and the legal theories they
allegedly support. This problem clearly existed in the District
Court.
Where a district court faces an amended complaint contain-
ing multiple claims for relief based on conclusory and ambiguous
allegations, the court has two options. After disregarding legal con-
clusions and conclusory statements of fact, it can dismiss the
amended complaint with an explanation of why it is deficient and
grant the plaintiff leave to amend, or it can convene a conference
of counsel, explain why the amended complaint is deficient, deter-
mine whether the pleader can cure the amended complaint’s defi-
ciencies, and, if he can, have the pleader replead the amended com-
plaint accordingly and without delay. 16
168. The conspiracy among the Individual Defend-
ants was a conspiracy to do one or more unlawful acts by un-
lawful means.
169. Each of the Individual Defendants engaged in
overt acts in furtherance of the conspiracy, as described above.
170. The damages to Plaintiff were in violation of
his constitutional protections under the First Amendment of
the United States Constitution. Plaintiff has been damaged as
set forth above.
Second Am. Compl. 28.
16 See Fed. R. Civ. P. 16(c)(2)(A)–(B) (“At any pretrial conference, the court
may consider and take appropriate action on the following matters: (A)
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16 Opinion of the Court 21-11255
On appeal, when this Court faces a pleading that, without
additional work, is practically unreviewable, we also have two op-
tions. We can remand the case to the district court for further pro-
ceedings, or, based solely on the allegations of the pleadings, we
can reframe the pleading ourselves, using the non-conclusory fac-
tual allegations and applying the law to the well-pled facts to deter-
mine if the pleader has stated a claim for relief. Here, we opt for
the latter. 17
In addition to the abundance of legal conclusions, the facts
in the Complaint cover a span of nine years (2008, when Turner
retired from the NCSO, to 2017) and the behavior of a plethora of
individuals in two sheriff’s departments. The Complaint’s allega-
tions also jump around in time rather than portray an organized,
linear picture of events. Most importantly, the Complaint’s allega-
tions within each count do not clearly identify which specific
formulating and simplifying the issues, and eliminating frivolous claims or de-
fenses; (B) amending the pleadings if necessary or desirable.”)
17 We do so instead of remanding the case to the District Court because
Turner has had three opportunities to plead his case, with warnings first in the
defendants’ motions to dismiss the original and amended complaints and then
in the District Court’s admonitions in dismissing the amended complaint. We
are not confident that a third amended complaint would cure the pleading
deficiencies—especially under the Twombly and Iqbal standards requiring
pleadings to allege facts that are more than “merely consistent” with liability.
Iqbal, 556 U.S. at 678, 129 S. Ct. at 1949 (quoting Twombly, 550 U.S. at 557,
127 S. Ct. at 1966). We also opt to reframe for purposes of efficiency since the
Complaint here contains a glimmer of a plausible claim—as the forthcoming
analysis shows.
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21-11255 Opinion of the Court 17
factual allegations the count incorporates by reference align with
the asserted claim. Much like a puzzle, for each count, the Com-
plaint dumps pieces on the ground in the form of nine years of facts.
Then it props up a picture of the completed puzzle in the form of
asserted causes of action and “recitals of the elements.” Iqbal, 556
U.S. at 678, 129 S. Ct. at 1949. But it leaves the defendants and
District Court the task of putting the puzzle together by guessing
what “actions [Williams took] in violation of [Turner’s] rights un-
der the First Amendment,” how “[t]hese violations were of the
type and character as to which any reasonable person or institution
would be aware,” and so on. Second Am. Compl. 21.
For instance, we know the Complaint alleges that Turner’s
arrest constituted retaliatory conduct. But it also alleges that “[t]he
retaliatory actions against [Turner] have continued and remain on-
going,” after which it provides an example that we address later.
This ambiguity would make it difficult for a defendant to intelli-
gently respond. The Complaint also alleges that Williams’s “disci-
plining and/or terminating” constituted retaliatory action. We as-
sume this refers to the assignment to teleserve, but that is not ex-
plicit. For one, Turner was not terminated. The Complaint alleges
that after he was informed of his future career trajectory, he sub-
mitted “written notice of his retirement.”18 While we may miss
18 Further, beyond the passing reference to the “discipling and/or terminat-
ing” of Turner, the Complaint does not allege facts suggesting a claim of con-
structive termination.
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18 Opinion of the Court 21-11255
some details of what the Complaint intended to communicate due
to its ambiguous and conclusory allegations, we can salvage some-
thing, even on appeal. 19 We can boil the case down by pruning
the legal conclusions and applying the well-pled facts to the legal
principles clearly espoused in the Complaint’s respective counts.
In essence, all of Turner’s claims relate to one overarching
incident. According to the Complaint, Williams retaliated against
him in two ways for announcing his intention to run for Nassau
County Sheriff. One was by having Turner arrested, 20 and the
other was condemning him to a lifetime of teleserve. 21 The First
Amendment protects Turner’s announcement to run for sheriff.
Nobody stopped him from speaking, but the Complaint alleges
that Williams, individually and acting under the color of law, or-
chestrated and conspired to orchestrate retaliatory actions in the
form of the arrest and reassignment to teleserve for Turner’s
speech.
19 This is more than can be said about the average shotgun pleading.
20 All counts of the Complaint implicate this alleged harm. The First Amend-
ment retaliation claims clearly regard the arrest. The false imprisonment/ar-
rest claims, by definition, must regard the arrest. And the conspiracy claim is
about an agreement to effectuate the arrest and the arrest itself.
21 Counts One through Four involve this alleged harm. The Complaint al-
leges that the reassignment to teleserve was retaliation for Turner announcing
his sheriff run, thus including the First Amendment retaliation claims. And
we can assume that the conspiracy count includes agreement to retaliate in
this regard as well.
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21-11255 Opinion of the Court 19
Therefore, we can regroup the counts into issues to simplify
the analysis. The arrest is issue one. We will analyze the First
Amendment retaliation claim against Williams individually as to
the arrest. If we find no retaliation, and thus that Turner was val-
idly arrested, the false imprisonment/arrest claims cannot survive
and there can be no concomitant conspiracy. The claims against
Williams in his official capacity would also not survive since those
claims require satisfaction of the individual claim, plus a route to
municipal liability under Monell v. Dep’t of Soc. Servs., 436 U.S.
658, 98 S. Ct. 2018 (1978). The reassignment to teleserve, then, is
issue two. For the same reasons as the arrest, if we find no individ-
ual liability under the retaliation claim, the official capacity claim
and the conspiracy claim cannot survive.
At bottom, we affirm the District Court not because
Turner’s Complaint is a shotgun pleading, but rather because, even
after we salvage the pleading and reframe it in our more straight-
forward fashion, the Complaint fails to state a claim. There was
probable cause to arrest Turner, and the Complaint does not allege
that, within the JSO, reassignment to teleserve for tampering with
evidence was an aberration. In fact, the Complaint suggests tele-
serve reassignment served as fairly standard discipline. We begin
our analysis with the general framework for First Amendment re-
taliation claims, which applies to both issues one and two.
III.
A.
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20 Opinion of the Court 21-11255
The First Amendment applies to the states through incorpo-
ration by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Near v. Minnesota ex rel. Olson, 283 U.S. 697, 707, 51 S. Ct. 625,
628 (1931). To state a claim for First Amendment retaliation under
§ 1983, a plaintiff generally must plead (1) that the plaintiff engaged
in constitutionally protected speech, (2) that the “defendant’s retal-
iatory conduct adversely affected the protected speech,” (3) and
that the retaliatory action caused the adverse effect on plaintiff’s
speech. Bennett v. Hendrix, 423 F.3d 1247, 1250 (11th Cir. 2005).
We recognize First Amendment retaliation claims because “[t]he
Amendment protects not only the affirmative right to speak, but
also the right to be free from retaliation by a public official for the
exercise of that right.” Echols, 913 F.3d at 1320 (citation omitted)
(internal quotation marks omitted).
The Complaint alleges that Turner announcing his sheriff
run constituted constitutionally protected speech. The parties do
not contest this point. This Court has previously recognized that
“[a]n interest in candidacy, and expression of political views with-
out interference from state officials who wish to discourage that
interest and expression, lies at the core of values protected by the
First Amendment.” Randall v. Scott, 610 F.3d 701, 713 (11th Cir.
2010). Therefore, the Complaint alleges constitutionally protected
conduct for both issues one and two.
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21-11255 Opinion of the Court 21
It is likely that a threat of arrest or reassignment to teleserve
would adversely affect this protected speech. 22 “A plaintiff suffers
adverse action if the defendant's allegedly retaliatory conduct
would likely deter a person of ordinary firmness from the exercise
of First Amendment rights.” Bennett, 423 F.3d at 1254. The threat
of arrest is the quintessential retaliatory conduct that would deter
a person of ordinary firmness from exercising First Amendment
rights. While the teleserve reassignment is a closer case, we as-
sume it would deter a person of ordinary firmness from exercising
First Amendment rights because the Complaint fails to plausibly
allege causation. See infra part IV.
Given the causation requirement to state a § 1983 First
Amendment retaliation claim and the large number of people in-
volved in Turner’s arrest, overcoming a Rule 12(b)(6) dismissal on
issue one necessarily faces difficulty. On appeal, the only remain-
ing defendants alleged to have caused Turner harm are Sheriff Wil-
liams and the JSO as a municipal body. And yet, a large cast of
characters feature in the facts as alleged in Turner’s Complaint.
22 The Complaint also seems to assert that the denial of Turner’s retired dep-
uty card and the refusal to allow him to take a retirement shooting requalifi-
cation test constituted retaliatory action. But both of those episodes transpired
between Turner and the NCSO. Sheriff Leeper of the NCSO denied Turner’s
request for a retired deputy card, and a different NCSO employee refused
Turner’s request for a retirement shooting requalification. Without any sug-
gestion that those acts could be attributed to anybody involved in this action
other than Sheriff Leeper, we will not address them, as Leeper is no longer a
party.
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22 Opinion of the Court 21-11255
Relevantly, a JSO detective with the Integrity/Special Inves-
tigations Unit submitted the affidavit supporting Turner’s, Kvies’s,
and Griffis’s arrest warrants. A different officer with the JSO then
served that warrant and arrested Turner. An assistant state attor-
ney approved the arrest warrant. And, most importantly, a judge
signed the warrant, indicating that probable cause existed to arrest
Turner. Williams neither personally arrested Turner nor applied
for the arrest warrant.
Vicarious liability does not apply to § 1983 suits. Iqbal, 556
U.S. at 676, 129 S. Ct. at 1948. “Absent vicarious liability, each Gov-
ernment official, his or her title notwithstanding, is only liable for
his or her own misconduct.” Id. at 677, 129 S. Ct. at 1949.
Beyond bare assertions that “false statements and omissions
were made at the direction of JAX SHERIFF and WILLIAMS,” and
that “[t]he arresting officer was instructed by WILLIAMS not to
conduct or failed to conduct a reasonable investigation” to deter-
mine the presence of probable cause for Turner’s arrest, the Com-
plaint does not connect Williams to the act of arrest or the applica-
tion for the arrest warrant except by conclusory statements. Even
assuming this disconnect is not fatal to the claim, the Complaint
also does not allege a connection between Williams and either the
assistant state attorney who approved the arrest warrant or the
judge who signed it.
“To prevail on [a First Amendment retaliation] claim, a
plaintiff must establish a ‘causal connection’ between the govern-
ment defendant’s ‘retaliatory animus’ and the plaintiff’s
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21-11255 Opinion of the Court 23
‘subsequent injury.’” Nieves v. Bartlett, 139 S. Ct. 1715, 1722 (2019)
(quoting Harman v. Moore, 547 U.S. 250, 259, 126 S. Ct. 1695, 1703
(2006)). In other words, it is insufficient for the Complaint to allege
that Williams “acted with a retaliatory motive” and that Turner
was harmed—Williams’s “motive must cause [Turner’s] injury.” 23
Id. (emphasis in original). This means that, taking Turner’s alleged
facts as true, it must be plausible that, had Williams not had any ill
will toward Turner, the latter would not have been arrested. Id.
The independent actions of the assistant state attorney and the
judge broke any causal chain between Williams’s alleged motive
and the alleged constitutional tort.
Setting aside the general causation problems with the Com-
plaint under the Twombly and Iqbal standard, the allegations face
a more specific hurdle. In view of the “but-for” cause requirement
for a First Amendment retaliatory arrest claim, the Supreme Court
has instructed that a plaintiff “must plead and prove the absence of
probable cause for the arrest.” Id. at 1724. Requiring a plaintiff to
plead an absence of probable cause keeps the relevant inquiry ob-
jective. “Because a state of mind is ‘easy to allege and hard to dis-
prove,’ a subjective inquiry would threaten to set off ‘broad-rang-
ing discovery’ in which ‘there often is no clear end to the relevant
evidence.’” Id. at 1725 (quoting Crawford-El v. Britton, 523 U.S.
23 Taking the facts as alleged in the Complaint as true, Williams may very
well have had a subjective intent to retaliate against Turner, as most evidenced
by the conversation between Turner and Ray Bullard.
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24 Opinion of the Court 21-11255
574, 585, 118 S. Ct. 1584, 1590 (1998) and Harlow v. Fitzgerald, 457
U.S. 800, 817, 102 S. Ct. 2727, 2737 (1982)).
This, then, brings us to the dispositive question of this ap-
peal: Was there probable cause to arrest Turner?
B.
1.
The Fourth Amendment protects against unreasonable
searches and seizures, and provides that “no Warrants shall issue,
but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation.” U.S.
Const. amend. IV. To ensure that warrants are not issued without
probable cause, the “law requires that a warrant for an arrest be
supported by ‘sufficient information to establish probable cause.’”
Paez v. Mulvey, 915 F.3d 1276, 1285 (11th Cir. 2019) (quoting
Holmes v. Kucynda, 321 F.3d 1069, 1083 (11th Cir. 2003)). In ana-
lyzing whether an officer arrested someone with probable cause,
we ask “whether a reasonable officer could conclude . . . that there
was a substantial chance of criminal activity.” Washington v. How-
ard, 25 F.4th 891, 902 (11th Cir. 2022) (internal quotation marks
omitted) (quoting District of Columbia v. Wesby, 138 S. Ct. 577,
588 (2018)).
Probable cause only requires that there be a substantial
chance of criminal activity. We do not require there be proof be-
yond a reasonable doubt of an arrestee’s guilt, or even that there
be a preponderance of evidence to support arrest. In other words,
“[p]robable cause ‘is not a high bar.’” Wesby, 138 S. Ct. at 586
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21-11255 Opinion of the Court 25
(quoting Kaley v. United States, 571 U.S. 320, 338, 134 S. Ct. 1090,
1103 (2014)). Since the Complaint must allege a lack of probable
cause, Turner faces a high bar. That bar only rises higher by the
fact that Turner was arrested under the authority of a warrant.
“At the Founding, the presence of a valid arrest warrant
made an arrest reasonable.” United States v. Phillips, 834 F.3d
1176, 1180 (11th Cir. 2016). However, “[t]he Warrants Clause re-
quires every warrant to be particular, sworn, and supported by
probable cause.” Id. Therefore, an arrest warrant creates a pre-
sumption, albeit a rebuttable one, that probable cause existed for
the arrest. This presumption derives from the “[g]reat deference []
accorded” a judicial determination of probable cause. United
States v. Gonzalez, 940 F.2d 1413, 1419 (11th Cir. 1991). To inquire
as to probable cause when a person is arrested pursuant to a war-
rant is to look behind the warrant to the information presented to
the signing judge. We begin by asking whether the warrant affida-
vit possessed an intentional or reckless misstatement or omission.
Paez, 915 F.3d at 1287. If the affidavit contained any such misstate-
ments or omissions, we next ask “whether probable cause would
be negated if the offending statement was removed or the omitted
information included” to determine the materiality of the error. Id.
Under step one, it is not enough that imperfect information
or information ultimately discovered to be incorrect infected the
warrant affidavit. Rather, the person attacking a warrant affidavit
must allege “deliberate falsehood or [] reckless disregard for the
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26 Opinion of the Court 21-11255
truth.” 24 Franks v. Delaware, 438 U.S. 154, 171, 98 S. Ct. 2674, 2684
(1978). Turner’s Complaint points to four alleged misstatements
and omissions in the warrant affidavit. We address all four in
turn—first for their falsity, then for their materiality. Even at a mo-
tion to dismiss stage, Turner carries the burden of pointing to what
intentionally or recklessly false information went into the warrant
affidavit. Otherwise, the presumption that the warrant validly is-
sued, and thus that probable cause existed, must stand.
2.
First, the Complaint alleges that Turner’s “acknowledge-
ment that there was beer in the car upon being asked by” his lieu-
tenant and sergeant immediately after the OIS was omitted from
the warrant affidavit. We can assume that the affiant detective in-
tentionally omitted this encounter from the affidavit, though
Turner does not allege the affiant knew about Turner’s interview.
But while it is odd that the affidavit does not mention the post-OIS
debrief, the omission is immaterial.
24 The other route to defeat probable cause is to show that the signing judge
failed to “perform his neutral and detached function” and “serve[d] merely as
a rubber stamp for the police.” Aguilar v. Texas, 378 U.S. 108, 111, 84 S. Ct.
1509, 1512 (1964) (internal quotation marks omitted), abrogated on other
grounds, Illinois v. Gates, 462 U.S. 213, 103 S. Ct. 2317 (1983); see also United
States v. Leon, 468 U.S. 897, 914, 104 S. Ct. 3405, 3416 (1984). With the excep-
tion of asserting in a conclusory fashion that the judge who signed Turner’s
arrest warrant acted as a “rubber stamp,” the Complaint does not allege that
the judge did not perform in a neutral and detached fashion.
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21-11255 Opinion of the Court 27
Turner was arrested in violation of Fla. Stat. §§ 918.13 25 and
777.04(3) 26 for tampering with evidence and conspiracy to do the
same. According to the facts in the Complaint, before the OIS,
Turner, Kvies, and Griffis had placed beer props in the car. After
the OIS, but before other officers arrived and began asking ques-
tions, Kvies and Griffis, with at least the tacit approval of Turner,
removed the beer props and disposed of them away from the vehi-
cle. When asked if the officers had been drinking, Turner told his
lieutenant and sergeant that there were beer props in the Jeep
Cherokee. The affidavit omits this conversation, and instead relays
that Kvies and Griffis did not reveal that they had beer props or that
the beer props had been removed in their post-OIS interviews.
25 Fla. Stat. § 918.13 stated at the time of Turner’s arrest:
(1) No person, knowing that a criminal trial or proceeding or
an investigation by a duly constituted prosecuting authority,
law enforcement agency, grand jury or legislative committee
of this state is pending or is about to be instituted, shall:
(a) Alter, destroy, conceal, or remove any rec-
ord, document, or thing with the purpose to
impair its verity or availability in such proceed-
ing or investigation; or
(b) Make, present, or use any record, docu-
ment, or thing, knowing it to be false.
Fla. Stat. § 918.13(1) (amended 2022 by 2022 Fla. Laws 2022-084).
26 Fla. Stat. § 777.04 states: “A person who agrees, conspires, combines, or
confederates with another person or persons to commit any offense commits
the offense of criminal conspiracy.” Fla. Stat. § 777.04(3).
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28 Opinion of the Court 21-11255
While a criminal trial for Turner’s evidence tampering
charge would have required a prosecutor to prove a mental state,
it is unnecessary for the judge to have all potentially relevant infor-
mation regarding Turner’s mental state to make a probable cause
determination. Remember, the judge is only looking for a substan-
tial chance that Turner committed a crime. Whether or not the
judge knew that Turner told JSO officers that there was beer in the
car after the OIS has no bearing on the determination that there
was a substantial chance Turner tampered with evidence before
that interaction. Therefore, the omission of this conversation was
immaterial.
Second, the Complaint also alleges that the affidavit not
mentioning that Turner was interviewed at all the night of the OIS
was a material omission. As already discussed, inclusion of the in-
terview is not material to the judge’s probable cause determination
that actions taken before the interview constituted a crime.
Third, the Complaint alleges the affidavit omitted the fact
that “beer props were authorized in the vehicle for undercover of-
ficers.” However, Turner’s counsel acknowledged at oral argu-
ment that this is incorrect. 27 The affidavit states that “detectives
27 Even if Turner’s counsel never acknowledged the inconsistency, this alle-
gation would still fail. In general, courts only consider the four corners of a
complaint and the complaint’s attached exhibits when analyzing a Rule
12(b)(6) motion to dismiss. Fuller v. SunTrust Banks, Inc., 744 F.3d 685, 695–
96 (11th Cir. 2014); see also Fed. R. Civ. P. 10(c). If an exhibit attached to a
complaint contradicts the allegations about the exhibit set forth in the
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21-11255 Opinion of the Court 29
are allowed by policy to have ‘props’ to include beer while they are
working.” This assertion of falsity therefore fails.
Fourth, and most seriously, the Complaint alleges that the
affidavit’s statement that “Turner was re-interviewed by [the] affi-
ant” was a material misstatement. The affidavit maintains that at
this interview, “Turner admitted that he did tell Kvies to discard
the beer cans.” Turner’s Complaint, on the other hand, says that
Turner was only interviewed once—the omitted interview—and
he never admitted to discarding beer cans in that interview. Stand-
ing alone, this would certainly rise to the level of a material mis-
statement. However, in determining probable cause, we must
look at “the body of evidence as a whole” to determine if there was
a substantial chance a crime had been committed. Paez, 915 F.3d
at 1286. In other words, if we remove this misstatement, do we
still have probable cause? We do.
complaint itself, the exhibit controls. Hoefling v. City of Miami, 811 F.3d 1271,
1277 (11th Cir. 2016). “As our predecessor court warned nearly 80 years ago,
a ‘litigant may be defeated by his own evidence, the pleader by his own exhib-
its’ when ‘he has pleaded too much and has refuted his own allegations by
setting forth the evidence relied on to sustain them.’” Gill ex rel. K.C.R. v.
Judd, 941 F.3d 504, 511 (11th Cir. 2019) (emphasis omitted) (quoting Simmons
v. Peavy-Welsh Lumber Co., 113 F.2d 812, 813 (5th Cir. 1940)).
Turner’s Complaint had attached a copy of the Affidavit for Arrest
Warrant presented to the judge to secure the warrants for his, Kvies’s, and
Griffis’s arrests. The affidavit therefore forms part of the Complaint and con-
trols even where the Complaint itself says something different.
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30 Opinion of the Court 21-11255
From the affidavit, the judge learned that Kvies admitted to
removing the beer props, Griffis admitted to knowing that the beer
props were removed from the vehicle, and Turner was with these
two officers on the night of the OIS. The Complaint does not con-
tend that the affidavit falsely presented any of this information to
the judge. This information may not constitute probable cause on
its own, but the affidavit also quotes material from the iPhone re-
cording Kvies created while the officers disposed of the beer props.
Though Turner’s Complaint describes the contents of the iPhone
recording differently, it does not assert that the quotes in the affi-
davit are incorrect. 28 This information, without the misstatement,
sufficiently underlies a determination that there was a substantial
28 The parties dispute whether the District Court properly considered the con-
tents of the iPhone recording since the recording was attached to Williams’s
motion to dismiss rather than to the Complaint itself. Turner practically in-
vited the Court to do so by quoting from it in his Complaint and challenging
an affidavit that relied on it. Nevertheless, because the Complaint never al-
leges that the affidavit mischaracterized the iPhone recording, it is unnecessary
to consult the actual recording at all. The Complaint can only negate probable
cause if it points to an intentional or reckless misstatement or omission in the
affidavit. Though it presents a different interpretation of the iPhone audio,
Turner’s Complaint does not allege that the swearing detective intentionally
or recklessly misrepresented the recording’s contents to the judge, thus caus-
ing the judge to make the probable cause determination based on incorrect
information. And we can of course consider the affidavit itself in reviewing
the probable cause determination because Turner attached it to his Com-
plaint. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 10(c).
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21-11255 Opinion of the Court 31
chance Turner participated in the evidence tampering. Therefore,
even this misstatement was immaterial.
3.
Beyond the above-mentioned alleged misstatements and
omissions in the warrant affidavit, Turner makes three types of ar-
guments to support his assertion that there was no probable cause
to arrest him. First, Turner’s Complaint alleges many times that
Turner could not possibly have possessed the requisite intent to
violate the evidence tampering statute. Second, because the Jeep
Cherokee does not appear to have been processed as evidence—
due to the next officers to check out the vehicle finding the cocaine
from the night of the OIS still on the floorboard—the charge itself
was disingenuous. Third, because JSO policy allowed beer props
in the car, removing them from the vehicle post-OIS could not pos-
sibly constitute tampering with evidence.
The third argument is not particularly availing given that the
affidavit informed the judge, while making the probable cause de-
termination, that beer props were authorized to be in the vehicle.
The intent and lack of investigation arguments would have been
incredibly useful to Turner had he been prosecuted. But their pres-
ence in the Complaint reveals the yawning gap between proving
someone’s guilt of a crime beyond a reasonable doubt and showing
probable cause—or a substantial chance someone committed a
crime.
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32 Opinion of the Court 21-11255
If the judge acted reasonably in concluding that a crime was
committed based on the totality of the evidence at the time, then
“the presence of some conflicting evidence or possible defense will
not vitiate a finding of probable cause.” Paez, 915 F.3d at 1286.
And an officer or judge, in determining the existence of probable
cause, “need not take ‘every conceivable step . . . at whatever cost,
to eliminate the possibility of convicting an innocent person.’”
Rankin v. Evans, 133 F.3d 1425, 1436 (11th Cir. 1998) (quoting Till-
man v. Coley, 886 F.2d 317, 321 (11th Cir. 1989)). They also need
not “resolve every inconsistency found in the evidence.” Paez, 915
F.3d at 1286.
Specifically with regard to the warrant affiant not presenting
the judge with Turner’s post-OIS interview, probable cause does
not require the judge to rule out “a suspect’s innocent explanation
for suspicious facts.” Wesby, 138 S. Ct. at 588. And, again, as long
as the totality of the evidence points to a substantial chance of a
crime, an officer is not “required to sift through conflicting evi-
dence or resolve issues of credibility.” Huebner v. Bradshaw, 935
F.3d 1183, 1188 (11th Cir. 2019) (internal quotations omitted)
(quoting Dahl v. Holley, 312 F.3d 1228, 1234 (11th Cir. 2002), abro-
gated on other grounds by Lozman v. City of Riviera Beach, 138 S.
Ct. 1945 (2018)).
“The Constitution does not guarantee that only the guilty
will be arrested.” Baker v. McCollan, 443 U.S. 137, 145, 99 S. Ct.
2689, 2695 (1979). It only provides protection against being ar-
rested without probable cause. Turner presents many good
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21-11255 Opinion of the Court 33
reasons why he should not be found guilty of evidence tampering.
As demonstrated by the assistant state attorney’s decision not to
prosecute, these arguments would likely have found success in a
criminal trial. None of Turner’s arguments, however, alone or col-
lectively, negates the fact that it was objectively reasonable to de-
termine that there was a substantial chance Turner committed a
crime at the time the judge signed the arrest warrant. Turner’s
Complaint, therefore, fails to plausibly allege an absence of proba-
ble cause. In fact, probable cause affirmatively existed to arrest
Turner.
C.
While we conclude that Turner’s Complaint fails to plead
the absence of probable cause required by Nieves, the Supreme
Court provides two narrow exceptions where a plaintiff need not
carry that burden. The first is “when the ‘unique’ five factual cir-
cumstances” from Lozman v. City of Riviera Beach, 138 S. Ct. 1945
(2018), are all present. DeMartini v. Town of Gulf Stream, 942 F.3d
1277, 1297 (11th Cir. 2019). The second “is warranted for circum-
stances where officers have probable cause to make arrests, but
typically exercise their discretion not to do so.” Nieves v. Bartlett,
139 S. Ct. 1715, 1727 (2019). To avail himself of this second excep-
tion, a plaintiff must present “objective evidence that he was ar-
rested when otherwise similarly situated individuals not engaged
in the same sort of protected speech had not been.” Id.; see also
DeMartini, 942 F.3d at 1297. We analyze the Lozman exception
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34 Opinion of the Court 21-11255
first, then move on to determining whether Turner’s Complaint
alleges that he was arrested where similarly situated individuals
were not.
1.
Because we have already decided that Turner’s Complaint
does not adequately allege an absence of probable cause, we look
to the five considerations the Supreme Court analyzed in Lozman:
(1) plaintiff Lozman had alleged “more governmental
action than simply an [officer’s] arrest” because he
claimed that the City “itself retaliated against him
pursuant to an ‘official municipal policy’ of intimida-
tion”; (2) the plaintiff had alleged that the City’s retal-
iation plan was “premeditated” and formed months
earlier (before the arrest); (3) the plaintiff had “objec-
tive evidence” of a policy motivated by retaliation, as
he had a transcript of a closed-door meeting where a
Councilmember stated that the City should use its re-
sources to “intimidate” Lozman and others who filed
lawsuits against the City; (4) there was less of a con-
cern about the causation problem and opening the
floodgates of frivolous retaliation claims because the
City’s official policy of retaliation was formed months
earlier, there was little relation between the “pro-
tected speech that prompted the retaliatory policy
and the criminal offense (public disturbance) for
which the arrest was made,” and “it was unlikely that
the connection between the alleged animus and in-
jury will be weakened by an official’s legitimate
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21-11255 Opinion of the Court 35
consideration of speech”; and (5) the plaintiff’s
speech—the right to petition—was “one of the most
precious of the liberties safeguarded by the Bill of
Rights” and was “high in the hierarchy of First
Amendment values.”
DeMartini, 942 F.3d at 1294 (alterations in original) (emphasis
omitted) (quoting Lozman, 138 S. Ct. at 1949, 1954–55).
Turner’s circumstance matches the first consideration. The
Complaint alleges more than that he was arrested. As previously
discussed, Turner’s Complaint alleges that the announcement of
his Nassau County sheriff run brought down on him retaliation in
the form of the arrest and the relegation to teleserve duties for the
rest of his career, as well as a denial of a retired deputy card from
the NCSO and refusal to attempt the retirement shooting requali-
fication with the NCSO. The allegations span two police depart-
ments and amount to much more than that Turner was arrested
because of his speech.
Turner’s Complaint does not allege enough to satisfy the
second consideration, however. The Complaint states multiple
times that the “timeline of events makes it clear” that Williams
planned to and did retaliate against Turner. But these statements
are conclusory and not entitled to a presumption of truth at the
Rule 12(b)(6) stage. See Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 556 U.S. 662, 679, 129 S.
Ct. 1937, 1950 (2009). Turner’s Complaint alleges two alternative
theories, however, that come close but fail to allege a premeditated
plan.
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36 Opinion of the Court 21-11255
For one, the Complaint presents Turner’s conversation with
Ray Bullard after the OIS, but before Turner’s arrest. The gist of
that conversation, as alleged in the Complaint, is that Bullard heard
Henderson (Turner’s potential opponent in the race for Nassau
County sheriff) say that Williams was working with Leeper to scut-
tle Turner’s candidacy. Assuming arguendo that the multiple lev-
els of hearsay make no difference to the plausibility of this claim,
this allegation is not enough to satisfy factor two.
In Lozman, the plaintiff alleged the city formulated a plan of
retaliation months before his arrest. 138 S. Ct. at 1949, 1954. The
plaintiff also alleged the city formed the plan before the act that
supposedly served as the basis for the crime for which he was ar-
rested. Id. at 1949. The reason the Supreme Court found the tem-
poral gap between the plan to retaliate and the actual arrest im-
portant was to target pretextual arrests for § 1983 liability and weed
out arrests upon legitimate considerations. Id. at 1954. When the
alleged retaliatory plan falls between the arrestable conduct and the
arrest, rather than before the arrestable conduct, the presence of a
plan becomes less severable from legitimate considerations for the
arrest.
Turner’s Complaint does not allege egregious premedita-
tion like the Court found in Lozman, and the two possible allega-
tions of a plan may have occurred after the OIS. The Complaint
does not identify when the remarks Bullard overheard Henderson
making took place. For all a reader knows, Bullard could have told
Turner of his findings the day after he heard them. This would
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21-11255 Opinion of the Court 37
place Henderson’s remarks before Turner’s arrest but after the ac-
tions for which Turner was arrested (disposing of the beer props
after the OIS). Thus, even giving the Complaint the benefit of the
doubt and assuming the most dastardly motivations for Williams
and Leeper, this allegation does not lead inextricably to the infer-
ence that Williams premeditated a plan of retaliation. If the alleged
conversation took place after the OIS, Bullard might have just
heard Henderson relishing the fact that there was a substantial
chance his political opponent had committed a crime and would
therefore no longer be an obstacle to winning the sheriff position.
The other allegation the Complaint makes that could go to
consideration two is an alleged round table discussion between
Williams, Volgalsang (the Fraternal Order of Police lawyer repre-
senting Turner’s interests), and two other senior officers with the
JSO to “decide to arrest [Turner] and decide[] to investigate, arrest
and otherwise retaliate against [Turner] long before obtaining
probable cause and in spite of the lack of probable cause for arrest
of [Turner].” This allegation fails, however, for similar reasons that
the alleged overheard conversation Bullard reported to Turner
fails.
There is no indication when this meeting happened.
Though the Complaint says it took place “long before” obtaining
probable cause, the Complaint also repeatedly asserts—including
in the same sentence—that there was never probable cause to ar-
rest Turner. Thus, the assertion that the meeting took place long
before probable cause existed does little to place the meeting on a
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38 Opinion of the Court 21-11255
timeline of the allegations. With that ambiguity, taking the Com-
plaint’s well-pled allegations as true, this meeting could have oc-
curred after the OIS, but before Turner’s arrest. In that case, a
meeting that included top JSO leadership and the Fraternal Order
of the Police lawyer not only looks completely innocuous but
makes perfect sense. JSO leadership would have acted reasonably
by discussing the possibility of arresting fellow police officers for
tampering with evidence in what was, in part, an internal investi-
gation. Such a meeting does not make a “plausible suggestion” that
Williams and the JSO leadership concocted a retaliation plan
months before the arrest like in Lozman. Twombly, 550 U.S. at
566, 127 S. Ct. at 1971. Therefore, Turner’s Complaint does not
satisfy consideration two since the allegations, assuming the worst
intent, are just as consistent with beneficial timing for Henderson
and normal police leadership as they are for a conspiracy to snuff
out Turner’s candidacy. Id. at 554, 127 S. Ct. at 1964 (finding alle-
gations consistent with conspiracy but also consistent with lawful
behavior inadequate).
Because Turner appeals a Rule 12(b)(6) dismissal, considera-
tion three should not require Turner to actually produce objective
evidence. But the Complaint does not even allege the existence of
objective evidence of a policy to retaliate like that present in Loz-
man. The plaintiff in Lozman pointed to a transcript where a city
councilmember announced the governing body’s intention to re-
taliate against him. 138 S. Ct. at 1949. Here, the Complaint only
points to a round table meeting with little by way of
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21-11255 Opinion of the Court 39
contextualizing facts (when it took place) and a conversation that a
third-party (Bullard) overheard that included discussion of the de-
fendants’ motives. Of course, we do not know if Henderson’s over-
heard conversation was with Williams or Leeper, or if it was just
about them. This falls far short of the objective evidence needed
to satisfy Lozman’s narrow exception.
The Complaint may have alleged enough to fulfill consider-
ation four. One of the sub-elements of the factor does not even
apply to Turner’s situation. Unlike in Lozman, there could be no
legitimate consideration of Turner’s running for sheriff in the deci-
sion to arrest him for tampering with evidence. See id. at 1954.
But, similar to Lozman, there is little relation between Turner’s
protected speech and the arrest. See id. And it is unlikely that the
success of Turner’s suit would open the floodgates of litigation be-
cause it is improbable that a decision for Turner would unleash a
torrent of arrested political candidates pursuing § 1983 damages.
Turner’s Complaint may also satisfy the fifth consideration,
but it certainly weighs less strongly here than it did in Lozman. We
will not engage in a full analysis of the “hierarchy of First Amend-
ment values,” but if the right to petition one’s government lies at
the heart of our country’s free speech protections, the right to run
for office must come in somewhere lower on the list. Id. at 1955.
Since Lozman only provides a narrow exception, it is not
enough that the Complaint’s allegations satisfy up to three of the
five considerations the Supreme Court weighed in deciding Loz-
man. The Complaint’s allegations must satisfy all of them. Due to
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40 Opinion of the Court 21-11255
the lack of allegations pointing to objective evidence of a retalia-
tory plan and an absence of allegations indicating that Williams
cooked up such a plan well in advance of the arrestable conduct,
Turner cannot avail himself of the Lozman exception to having to
allege an absence of probable cause.
2.
Turner’s Complaint also alleges facts that could go to the
differential treatment exception to Nieves’s requirement that plain-
tiffs allege and prove an absence of probable cause for a First
Amendment retaliatory arrest claim. This exception “is warranted
for circumstances where officers have probable cause to make ar-
rests, but typically exercise their discretion not to do so,” Nieves,
139 S. Ct. at 1727, and requires “objective evidence that [Turner]
was arrested when otherwise similarly situated individuals not en-
gaged in the same sort of protected speech had not been.” Id. The
Complaint points to nine other officers who had been caught tam-
pering with evidence. According to the Complaint, none of them
were ever arrested for their conduct, but most of them were tem-
porarily assigned to teleserve. While there was allegedly a substan-
tial chance each of the nine individuals committed the crime of
tampering with evidence and yet were not arrested, Turner’s list of
comparators ignores the two closest comparators: Kvies and
Griffis. They were arrested. In fact, a single warrant affidavit led
to Kvies’s, Griffis’s, and Turner’s arrests. Although the Complaint
says the two junior officers were arrested “for the sole purpose of
arresting Plaintiff without it appearing suspect,” this is indisputably
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21-11255 Opinion of the Court 41
conclusory. There was just as much probable cause to arrest the
two of them as there was to arrest Turner.
This differential treatment exception is also narrow and re-
quires objective evidence. Still taking the Complaint’s allegations
as true, there are two reasons why this exception cannot apply
here. First, all three of the undercover officers from the OIS were
arrested, not just Turner. Turner was therefore treated the same
as the most similar comparators. Second, almost all of the compar-
ators Turner mentions received some sort of punishment. While
not arrested, these past comparators make clear that evidence tam-
pering is not merely an offense in name that often goes overlooked.
See, e.g., State v. Jennings, 666 So. 2d 131 (Fla. 1995) (reviewing an
arrest under Fla. Stat. § 918.13 for evidence tampering); Costanzo
v. State, 152 So. 3d 737 (Fla. 4th Dist. Ct. App. 2014) (reviewing a
conviction under the evidence tampering statute); E.I. v. State, 25
So. 3d 625 (Fla. 2d Dist. Ct. App. 2009) (reviewing an adjudication
of delinquency under the same).
Since Turner’s Complaint does not adequately allege an ab-
sence of probable cause—in fact, we find as a matter of law that
there was probable cause to arrest Turner—and the Complaint
does not allege facts sufficient to satisfy either the Lozman or the
differential treatment exceptions, Turner’s § 1983 First Amend-
ment retaliation claim against Williams based on Turner’s arrest
was properly dismissed by the District Court as failing to state a
claim. Since Turner’s Complaint does not allege facts sufficient to
plausibly show that his arrest was retaliatorily at all, the First
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42 Opinion of the Court 21-11255
Amendment retaliation claim against Williams in his official capac-
ity must consequently fail as well. An official policy cannot be the
“moving force” of a constitutional violation if there is no constitu-
tional violation. Monell v. Dep’t of Soc. Servs., 436 U.S. 658, 694,
98 S. Ct. 2018, 2038 (1978).
Turner’s claims asserting a false imprisonment/arrest claim
under Florida common law against Williams in his official and in-
dividual capacities also fall with the First Amendment retaliation
claim. “[P]robable cause constitutes an absolute bar to both state
and § 1983 claims alleging false arrest,” and since we found proba-
ble cause here, the common law claims also fail to state a claim for
relief. Rankin v. Evans, 133 F.3d 1425, 1435 (11th Cir. 1998). While
probable cause is an affirmative defense to Florida’s false arrest
claim, probable cause existed to arrest Turner as a matter of law.
See id. at 1436. Further, Turner was arrested pursuant to a valid
warrant signed by a judge. His arrest, therefore, could not possibly
have been “false.” See Johnson v. Weiner, 19 So. 2d 699, 700 (Fla.
1944) (stating that imprisonment under legal authority cannot be
false). Therefore, the District Court properly dismissed the com-
mon law false arrest claims as well. Thus, Turner’s Complaint fails
to state a plausible claim for relief on issue one.
IV.
Turner’s Complaint also alleges that Turner’s assignment to
teleserve after the assistant state attorney declined to prosecute
constituted retaliatory conduct for Turner’s protected speech.
“The requisite ‘causal relation’ for a § 1983 claim ‘does not exist
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21-11255 Opinion of the Court 43
when the continuum between Defendant's action and the ultimate
harm is occupied by the conduct of deliberative and autonomous
decision-makers.’” Carruth v. Bentley, 942 F.3d 1047, 1056 (11th
Cir. 2019) (quoting Dixon v. Burke Cnty., 303 F.3d 1271, 1275 (11th
Cir. 2002)). Since we have already decided that there was probable
cause to arrest Turner, and the arrest was ultimately effectuated by
an independent assistant state attorney and independent judge, the
independent actions broke the causal chain between any retaliatory
animus on Williams’s part and the teleserve reassignment.
Though charges were never proven in a criminal setting, it
is not outrageous that an officer who had been arrested in connec-
tion with an OIS would be reassigned to a less public-facing role
within the police force. And though this is not fleshed out in the
Complaint, the reassignment decision could plausibly have had
something to do with the OIS itself. We do not know. The allega-
tions are merely consistent with liability; they do not make entitle-
ment to relief plausible. Iqbal, 556 U.S. at 678, 129 S. Ct. at 1949.
There are too many potential factors in this decision for us to say,
even taking all of the Complaint’s factual allegations as true, that
but for Williams’s alleged retaliatory animus, Turner would not
have been reassigned. Nieves, 139 S. Ct. at 1722 (requiring but-for
causation between a defendant’s retaliatory animus and a plaintiff's
injury).
The comparators do not help Turner here either. Most of
the officers the Complaint mentions were reassigned to teleserve
as part of their tampering with evidence discipline. Though the
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44 Opinion of the Court 21-11255
Complaint alleges all these reassignments were temporary, Turner
resigned before he could have potentially discovered that his reas-
signment would ultimately have been temporary as well. There-
fore, the District Court properly dismissed Turner’s § 1983 First
Amendment retaliation claim against Williams in his individual ca-
pacity for the teleserve reassignment as failing to state a plausible
claim for relief. Concomitantly, because we find no retaliation in
the reassignment, the District Court also properly dismissed the of-
ficial capacity claim. Thus, the Complaint fails to state claims for
relief as to issue two as well.
V.
Finally, Turner alleges a Florida common law conspiracy
claim against Leeper and Williams in their individual capacities,
presumably for both the alleged arrest and teleserve harms. “[A]n
actionable conspiracy requires an actionable underlying tort or
wrong.” SFM Holdings, Ltd. v. Banc of Am. Sec., LLC, 764 F.3d
1327, 1339 (11th Cir. 2014) (internal quotations omitted) (quoting
Raimi v. Furlong, 702 So. 2d 1273, 1284 (Fla. 3d Dist. Ct. App.
1997)). Since we have found no underlying tort in either the arrest
or the reassignment, the District Court properly dismissed the con-
spiracy claim as failing to allege a plausible claim for relief.
VI.
Because Turner’s Complaint does not plausibly allege an ab-
sence of probable cause for his arrest, that Turner satisfies either of
the two exceptions to carry that burden, or a plausible connection
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21-11255 Opinion of the Court 45
between his election announcement and teleserve reassignment,
we affirm the District Court’s dismissal of Turner’s Second
Amended Complaint under Rule 12(b)(6).
AFFIRMED.