In the
United States Court of Appeals
For the Seventh Circuit
Nos. 09-1098 & 09-1101
G INA P URVIS,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
D ANIEL O EST; P ATRICIA L UNN;
G ARY V ICINI; and D OUGLAS B ERNABEI,
Defendants-Appellants.
Appeals from the United States District Court
for the Central District of Illinois.
No. 05-1348—Michael M. Mihm, Judge.
A RGUED N OVEMBER 12, 2009—D ECIDED A UGUST 2, 2010
Before C UDAHY, M ANION, and W ILLIAMS, Circuit Judges.
C UDAHY, Circuit Judge. Gina Purvis was a high-school
teacher, who was suspected of having a sexual relation-
ship with her then-15-year-old biology student, “M.R.”.
The school conducted an investigation in which Gary
Vicini, the dean of students, played a leading role. This
created a potential conflict of interest, since Vicini had
2 Nos. 09-1098 & 09-1101
himself been accused by Purvis of sexually harassing a
student a year previously. After Vicini threatened M.R.
with expulsion and possible jail time should he continue
to deny his having had an affair with Purvis, the student
capitulated and admitted the existence of such a relation-
ship. The school district’s superintendent, Daniel Oest,
then reported the allegations to the police. The chief of
the Spring Valley Police Department, Douglas Bernabei,
notified the Department of Child and Family Services
(DCFS). Both began investigating. The DCFS investigator,
Judith O’Brien, ultimately recommended that Purvis be
indicated as a sexual perpetrator. Purvis was indicted by
a grand jury and arrested on December 15, 2004.
After being acquitted following a bench trial, Purvis
brought suit against Vicini, Oest, the school principal,
Patricia Lunn and Bernabei, among others. In relevant
part for the present appeal, she alleged deprivation of
due process and false arrest. The district court declined
to grant summary judgment in favor of the defendants.
It found that the school defendants lacked qualified
immunity and that a reasonable jury could find facts
sufficient to amount to a deprivation of due process.
With respect to the alleged false arrest, the district court
determined that, “by the slimmest of margins,” Purvis had
demonstrated a genuine issue of material fact as to
whether Bernabei had probable cause. It also found that
qualified immunity did not protect Bernabei in the cir-
cumstances.
For the reasons that follow, we reverse the district
court’s holding as to Bernabei, finding that sufficient
Nos. 09-1098 & 09-1101 3
evidence to establish probable cause existed as a matter
of law. We also conclude that the district court erred in
finding that Oest, Vicini and Lunn are not protected by
qualified immunity.
I. BACKGROUND
Whispers of an illicit, sexual relationship between a
teacher, Gina Purvis, and her then-15-year-old student,
M.R., began circulating in the spring of 2004 at Hall High
School District 502 in Spring Valley, Illinois. They were
questioned by Patricia Lunn, the principal, but both M.R.
and his teacher denied the veracity of the rumors. The
gossip returned anew the following semester, which
prompted school officials to act. The superintendent,
Daniel Oest, and the principal decided that an investiga-
tion was in order, which would be carried out by Oest
and Gary Vicini, the dean of students.
The rumors obviously concerned a matter of the
utmost importance. Schools are mandatory reporters
under Illinois law, such that they must report suspected
child abuse immediately to the DCFS if they have “rea-
sonable cause to believe” that such abuse took place. 325
ILL . C OMP. S TAT. 5/4. Given the circumstances, some
inquiry to determine whether there was any semblance
of truth to the rumors was surely advisable.
The investigation was stymied by an extraordinary
defect, however, for one of the investigators, Vicini, had
himself been accused by Purvis of sexually harassing a
female student the year before. Moreover, Vicini had
4 Nos. 09-1098 & 09-1101
been informed that Purvis was the person who had re-
ported him. Obviously, it would be unsurprising if Vicini
harbored some form of resentment toward Purvis. The
school principal, Lunn, was aware of this conflict of
interest, yet said nothing. Throughout the ensuing in-
vestigation, Oest, the superintendent, remained unaware
of the potential bias on Vicini’s part.
On November 10, 2004, Oest and Vicini interviewed
M.R., who twice denied having had any sexual relation-
ship with Purvis. The following fact is of considerable
importance to the present appeal: there is evidence that
Vicini, biased as he may have been against Purvis, threat-
ened M.R. with expulsion and even imprisonment should
he continue to deny the existence of the relationship.
The student asked whether the matter would be kept
confidential, which Oest assured him would be the
case. The school’s official policy, however, was only to
keep such statements confidential “to the extent
possible given the need to investigate.”
M.R. then changed his story, recounting myriad details
about his alleged relationship with Purvis. He wrote a
statement in which he indicated that he and Purvis had
gotten closer to one another in January 2004, that, in
February, the two had kissed at school and had engaged
in sexual activity in her house, her car and his house,
that some similar activity took place in May, but that
later that month she told him that they needed to slow
down. He contended, however, that on September 2 she
kissed him again.
After obtaining this statement, Oest attempted, but was
unable, to contact Purvis, since she didn’t answer her cell
Nos. 09-1098 & 09-1101 5
phone. He then contacted local law enforcement and
informed Douglas Bernabei of the Spring Valley Police
Department of what had transpired. Bernabei then con-
tacted DCFS, which appointed Judith O’Brien to con-
duct an inquiry on its behalf. No one informed either
Bernabei or O’Brien of Vicini’s potential conflict of inter-
est. Nor were they informed of the pressure that Vicini
had exerted on M.R., or that he had purportedly induced
the student to change his story.
Bernabei met with Oest the very same day, where
Bernabei was informed of the rumors and read M.R.’s
written statement. Bernabei then met with M.R.’s mother,
who told him that she had suspected something was
going on between Purvis and her son. She also told
Bernabei that her son had informed her of his sexual
encounters with Purvis earlier that day. M.R.’s mother
also explained that Purvis had previously mentioned
rumors of a fling, which the teacher denied, saying that
she was merely mentoring the boy.
Bernabei then interviewed M.R., who explained that
Purvis initiated what ultimately became a mutual
French kiss in a lab-storage area of the classroom on
February 9, 2004. M.R. told Bernabei that this encounter
preceded his first sexual one with Purvis a few days later
and that he and his teacher had sex two to three times
per week during February, March and April of 2004. He
recounted myriad, specific details of the sexual acts in
which the two engaged. On one of these occasions, he
purported to have had “intercourse nine different times.”
M.R. also said that Purvis had shown him a vibrator
6 Nos. 09-1098 & 09-1101
that she kept in her dresser drawer. M.R. also told
Bernabei that his cousin, Rick Andes, while on leave from
the Navy, picked him up from Purvis’s house. M.R. said
that, while there, Andes had seen M.R. and Purvis kissing.
In addition, M.R. described a variety of gifts that Purvis
had given him, which included a baseball necklace, num-
erous photos and an Old Navy shirt.
M.R. explained that the sexual relationship had ended
by late April or early May, but that he and Purvis stayed
in contact by phone and internet over the summer. At
the start of the fall semester, he and Purvis exchanged
a couple of kisses. Finally, he informed Bernabei that he
had told some of his fellow students at school that the
rumors were true.
Bernabei proceeded further into this investigation,
which involved listening in on a phone call between
M.R.’s mother and Purvis, obtaining telephone records,
interviewing some of M.R.’s fellow students and meeting
M.R.’s cousin to corroborate the former’s statements.
These facts are developed below, as necessary to our
analysis. Through his investigation, Bernabei also un-
earthed some exculpatory evidence. This, too, is explored
below.
Purvis was indicted by a grand jury and arrested on
December 15, 2004. On October 20, 2005, Purvis and the
school district entered into an agreement pursuant to
which she voluntarily resigned her employment in ex-
change for $43,000. On October 31, 2005, Purvis was
acquitted of all charges after a bench trial. She then
brought the present lawsuit, alleging in relevant part
Nos. 09-1098 & 09-1101 7
deprivation of due process and false arrest. Oest, Lunn,
Vicini and Bernabei all moved for summary judgment,
which the district court denied in part relevant for this
appeal. The court found that none of the defendants
was entitled to qualified immunity. It also determined
that there were genuine issues of material fact as to
whether Oest, Lunn and Vicini deprived Purvis of due
process by giving Vicini a leading role in the school
investigation and as to whether Bernabei had probable
cause to arrest the plaintiff.
For the reasons that follow, we reverse the district
court and find that Oest, Lunn, Vicini and Bernabei are
entitled to summary judgment.
II. DISCUSSION
We review a district court’s denial of summary judg-
ment de novo. See Sullivan v. Ramirez, 360 F.3d 692, 696
(7th Cir. 2004). We similarly review a trial court’s denial
of a defendant’s claim of qualified immunity de novo. See
Finsel v. Cruppenink, 326 F.3d 903, 906 (7th Cir. 2003).
Although qualified immunity is an affirmative defense,
once raised, it becomes the plaintiff’s burden to defeat
it. See Wheeler v. Lawson, 539 F.3d 629, 639 (7th Cir. 2008).
In a qualified-immunity setting, the plaintiff bears
the burden of showing that the constitutional right alleg-
edly violated was clearly established at the time of
the challenged conduct. See Landstrom v. Ill. Dep’t of
Children & Family Servs., 892 F.2d 670, 675 (7th Cir. 1990).
Such a plaintiff can also prevail by showing that “the
conduct [at issue] is so egregious that no reasonable
8 Nos. 09-1098 & 09-1101
person could have believed that it would not violate
clearly established rights.” Wheeler, 539 F.3d at 639 (quoting
Smith v. City of Chicago, 242 F.3d 737, 742 (7th Cir. 2001)).
A. A Genuine Issue of Material Fact Exists as to Whether
the School’s Investigation Was Biased and Deprived
Purvis of Due Process
Purvis contends that her due-process rights were vio-
lated by Vicini’s pressuring M.R. into changing his
story and admitting the existence of a sexual relation-
ship. Purvis submits that Vicini exerted such pressure
because he held a fundamental animus against her, due
to her having previously reported him for sexual harass-
ment. She argues that his bias against her resulted in a
constitutional deprivation.
The first question is whether the record, viewed in the
light most favorable to Purvis, reveals a genuine issue
of material fact as to whether Vicini was biased against
her. We have no difficulty finding that it does. It is axiom-
atic that an individual accused of sexual harassment by
a fellow teacher, and who was informed of the identity
of the accuser, might harbor some resentment against
that accuser. Although Vicini denies holding a grudge
against Purvis, this raises a question of fact for the jury.
Thus, given the summary-judgment posture, we find
that the evidence supports a finding that Vicini was
biased against Purvis. In light of this determination, it is
troubling indeed that the principal, Lunn, would place
Vicini in a position in which he exercised at least some
Nos. 09-1098 & 09-1101 9
influence over the course of the school investigation.
Again viewing the record in the light most favorable to
the non-moving party, the evidence amply supports a
jury finding that Vicini exerted great pressure over M.R.
to admit the existence of a sexual relationship with
Purvis. It is a legitimate inference that Vicini may have
been spurred to exercise this pressure in some part by
his dislike of Purvis.
We have previously recognized that “fundamentally
biased process is not due process.” Levenstein v. Salafsky,
164 F.3d 345, 352 (7th Cir. 1998) (emphasis original).
In light of our preceding determination as to Vicini’s
potential bias and influence over the school investigation,
it is fair at the summary-judgment juncture to charac-
terize the school’s investigation of Purvis as funda-
mentally biased.
However, a lack of process does not necessarily translate
into a constitutional violation; rather, it must be tied to a
protected interest. It is well established, however, that a
person has a liberty interest to pursue employment in
her chosen field and that this interest is violated when a
state actor casts doubt on that individual’s good name
or reputation such that it becomes virtually impossible
for her to find new employment in that field. See
Townsend v. Vallas, 256 F.3d 661, 669-70 (7th Cir. 2001);
Strasburger v. Board of Education, 143 F.3d 351, 356 (7th Cir.
1998). It is also the case that a tenured employee has a
property interest in his job. Levenstein, 164 F.3d at 351.
Oest, Lunn and Vicini go to some length to emphasize
that they did not owe Purvis due process before alerting
10 Nos. 09-1098 & 09-1101
the DCFS of her suspected child abuse. They observe
that such reporting does not deprive the suspected abuser
of an interest in pursuing her chosen profession. Instead,
they point out, it is the DCFS’s decision to indicate a
person as a sexual abuser that effects a deprivation.
This is a potentially important point, and we therefore
address it in some detail.
First, and as an observational matter, Oest did not in
fact report Purvis to the DCFS; instead, he informed the
police department, which in turn notified the DCFS. If
we nevertheless treated his reporting Purvis to the police
as equivalent to notifying the DCFS, we agree that such
action would not in itself amount to a constitutional
deprivation. This holds true despite the current wording
of Illinois’s Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act
(ANCRA), which provides that:
if an employee of a school district has made a report
or caused a report to be made to the Department
under this Act involving the conduct of a current or
former employee of the school district and a request
is made by another school district for the provision
of information concerning the job performance or
qualifications of the current or former employee
because he or she is an applicant for employment
with the requesting school district, the general super-
intendent of the school district to which the request
is being made must disclose to the requesting school
district the fact that an employee of the school
district has made a report involving the conduct of
the applicant . . . .
Nos. 09-1098 & 09-1101 11
325 ILL. C OMP. S TAT. 5/4. Under this provision, it is con-
ceivable that a school’s reporting a teacher to the DCFS
could constitute a deprivation insofar as it wreaked
havoc on a person’s ability to find new employment in
his chosen field. One can only imagine that a person
who had been accused of such abuse would not wish
to remain a part of her current school in the future. Yet,
any attempt to apply for a job with a different district
would likely be frustrated when the other school sought
information concerning the applicant.1
Ultimately, however, we do not address this issue, in
light of the fact that the above-quoted language was
added to the statute after the events in the present case
took place. Moreover, there is no evidence in the record
that the act of reporting under ANCRA to the DCFS
alone has such a negative, de facto effect on a teacher’s
reputation that she is thereby rendered incapable of
pursuing her chosen career. Absent such evidence, and
because the quoted language in Section 4 was not opera-
tive at the time of the acts giving rise to the present
case, Oest, Lunn and Vicini’s act in causing Purvis to be
1
Even if we had to reach this question, however, it would be far
from clear that reporting would give rise to a deprivation. This
is because Section 4 provides that the fact that a report had been
made “may be disclosed only in cases where the employee
and the general superintendent have not been informed by the
Department that the allegations were unfounded.” 325 I LL .
C OMP . S TAT. 5/4. The negative impact of a report under ANCRA
is therefore ephemeral if the DCFS determines that the allega-
tions were unfounded.
12 Nos. 09-1098 & 09-1101
reported to the police, and indirectly to the DCFS, did not
in itself effect a deprivation.
This is not the end of the matter, however. Instead, we
must grapple with the possibility that the potentially
biased nature of the school’s investigation corrupted
the integrity of the subsequent investigations by the
DCFS and Chief Bernabei, essentially as found by the
district court.
Oest, Lunn and Vicini contend that the ensuing investi-
gations by O’Brien and Bernabei were sufficiently inde-
pendent as to afford Purvis the requisite due process
before any deprivation occurred. They appeal to our
prior decision in Trejo v. Shoben, where we held that
even if the initial investigator in that case were
“brimming over with animosity . . . [his] reasoning and
recommendation to terminate probationary employee
Trejo was reviewed by two separate, independent
faculty committees which conducted their own inves-
tigations of the charges and likewise came to the con-
clusion that Trejo’s misconduct warranted his removal
from the faculty.” 319 F.3d 878, 888 (7th Cir. 2003). In
the same way, Oest, Lunn and Vicini argue, the inves-
tigations by Bernabei and O’Brien were wholly indep-
endent. None of the school officials assisted with the
police and DCFS investigations.
It is a factual question whether the DCFS and the
police investigations were sufficiently independent as to
cure any due-process deficiency in the earlier inquiries
conducted by the school. There is certainly sufficient
evidence for a jury to answer this question in the affirma-
tive, given the considerable inculpatory evidence uncov-
Nos. 09-1098 & 09-1101 13
ered by Bernabei, which is detailed above, and the fact
that O’Brien participated in a second interview of M.R.
Nevertheless, viewing the facts in the light most favor-
able to Purvis, we find that a reasonable jury could
find that the investigations conducted by O’Brien and
Bernabei were not sufficiently independent to cure any
constitutional infirmity inherent in the school’s original
investigation. Unlike in Trejo, where the independent
faculty committees were apprised of all relevant facts,
there is no evidence in the record that either O’Brien or
Bernabei was made aware of Vicini’s potential bias and
his role in pressuring (arguably intimidating) M.R. into
providing the inculpatory statement that started the
ball rolling. We believe that a jury is best placed to
resolve the factual questions presented here.
We therefore conclude that the record, when viewed
in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, reveals a
genuine issue of material fact as to whether the school’s
investigation (1) was fundamentally biased and (2) de-
prived Purvis of her protected liberty interest in her
employment by corrupting the DCFS and police inves-
tigations, which ultimately resulted in her losing her
job and ongoing ability to work as a teacher. In this
regard, the district court is sustained. The remaining
question concerns Oest, Vicini and Lunn’s right to quali-
fied immunity.
B. Oest, Vicini and Lunn Are Entitled to Qualified
Immunity
Oest, Vicini and Lunn contend that they are entitled to
qualified immunity, which protects government officials
14 Nos. 09-1098 & 09-1101
from liability “insofar as their conduct does not violate
clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of
which a reasonable person would have known.” Harlow
v. Fitzgerald, 457 U.S. 800, 818 (1982). We apply a two-
part test to determine whether the doctrine attaches:
(1) whether the facts, taken in the light most favorable
to the plaintiff, show that the defendant violated a con-
stitutional right; and (2) whether that constitutional
right was clearly established at the time of the alleged
violation. Wheeler v. Lawson, 539 F.3d 629, 639 (7th Cir.
2008) (citing Saucier v. Katz, 533 U.S. 194, 201 (2001)). The
Supreme Court has made clear that the doctrine of quali-
fied immunity provides “ample room for mistaken judg-
ments” and protects all those but the “plainly incom-
petent and those who knowingly violate the law.” Hunter
v. Bryant, 502 U.S. 224, 227 (1991) (quoting Malley v.
Briggs, 475 U.S. 335, 343 (1986)).
We have already concluded that there exists a genu-
ine issue of material fact as to whether Vicini harbored
a bias against Purvis that led to corruption of the
integrity of the school’s initial inquiry and the DCFS and
the police department’s follow-up investigations. Thus,
the facts taken in the light most favorable to the plain-
tiff demonstrate that Oest, Vicini and Lunn violated a
constitutional right. This raises the question whether a
reasonable person in Oest, Vicini or Lunn’s position
would have known he was violating Purvis’s clearly
established federal rights in (a) knowingly allowing a
biased person to play a leading role in the initial inves-
tigation, which ultimately resulted in the biased individ-
ual’s threatening the suspected victim into admitting the
Nos. 09-1098 & 09-1101 15
existence of a relationship, (b) reporting the suspected
crime to the police, (c) providing the police with the
supposed victim’s written statement, which detailed the
specifics of the boy’s alleged affair with the teacher, but
(d) not informing the police or DCFS of the conflict of
interest and that the student’s statement had been pro-
vided only after the potentially biased person exerted
considerable pressure, which led the student to drop
his denials.
Oest was not aware of the potential conflict of interest
involving Vicini. It is clear therefore that a reasonable
person in his situation would not have known that ap-
pointing Lunn and Vicini to investigate the veracity of
the rumors would have involved a fundamentally biased
process, thus violating a clearly established constitutional
right. Oest is therefore entitled to qualified immunity.
Despite being aware of the potential conflict of interest,
Lunn and Vicini are also entitled to qualified immunity.
The district court correctly observed that there was
clearly established federal law at the time of reporting
Purvis that fundamentally biased process is not due
process. See Levenstein, 164 F.3d at 351. It was also well
established that a person has a protected interest in
pursuing employment in her chosen field. See Dupuy v.
Samuels, 397 F.3d 493, 503-04 (7th Cir. 2005). But this high-
level observation is insufficiently precise for the specific
circumstances in which Lunn and Vicini found them-
selves. There is no case law of the U.S. Courts of Appeals
or Supreme Court of which we are aware that demon-
strates that Purvis’s constitutional rights would have
16 Nos. 09-1098 & 09-1101
been violated by reporting her to a body that would
perform an independent investigation before effecting
a deprivation. Although we have found that there is
a genuine issue of material fact whether the ensuing
investigation by the DCFS was sufficiently independent
to cure any due-process deficiency, Lunn and Vicini
would not have been plainly incompetent to suppose
in light of our decision in Trejo that the subsequent,
independent DCFS investigation would have foreclosed
any constitutional violation. For this reason, we find
that Lunn and Vicini are similarly entitled to qualified
immunity and, hence, summary judgment.
It was clearly established that due process was denied
by the introduction of a fundamental conflict of interest
into the investigative process. But it was not clearly
established that such a procedural defect violated the
Constitution if whatever conclusion eventuated was
subject to confirmation and validation by a subsequent
independent investigation. This distinction may be
subtle, but here it is decisive.
C. Bernabei Had Probable Cause to Arrest Purvis
The last question we address is whether Bernabei’s
arresting Purvis is protected by the doctrine of qualified
immunity. We apply the same two-part test already
discussed; namely to determine whether the doctrine
attaches, we ask: (1) whether the facts, taken in the light
most favorable to the plaintiff, show that the defendant
violated a constitutional right; and (2) whether that
constitutional right was clearly established at the time
Nos. 09-1098 & 09-1101 17
of the alleged violation. Wheeler, 539 F.3d at 639 (citing
Saucier, 533 U.S. at 201).
Studying the record, it is clear that Bernabei uncovered
sufficient evidence to justify his arresting Purvis. The
first question in addressing a qualified-immunity defense
concerns the merit of the underlying constitutional claim.
Norfleet v. Webster, 439 F.3d 392, 395 (7th Cir. 2006). Even
viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to
Purvis, Bernabei had probable cause to arrest her. There-
fore, her constitutional rights were not violated. Mustafa
v. City of Chicago, 442 F.3d 544, 547 (7th Cir. 2006). Bernabei
is thus entitled to protection under the doctrine of
qualified immunity. Akande v. Grounds, 555 F.3d 586, 590
(7th Cir. 2009).
Bernabei uncovered considerable evidence of Purvis’s
having had an illegal, sexual relationship with her stu-
dent. First, Bernabei read M.R.’s written report, which
recounted in considerable detail the substance of his
illicit relationship with his teacher. Second, the police
officer met with M.R.’s mother, who told him that she
had suspected something was going on between her
son and Purvis. Bernabei was also informed that M.R.
had told his grandmother that he and Purvis had kissed
and that Purvis had told him that she loved him. Fourth,
on November 16, 2004, Bernabei conducted an in-person
interview of M.R., whose ensuing account of his affair
with Purvis was consistent with his prior statement. Fifth,
the officer arranged with the U.S. Navy that Rick Andes,
a witness who was onboard a submarine, would be kept
ex communicado until Bernabei spoke with him. When
18 Nos. 09-1098 & 09-1101
Bernabei spoke with Andes by phone, the latter gave
an account that was largely consistent with M.R.’s as to
what had transpired one evening in late February/early
March 2004. Andes explained that he had driven to
Purvis’s home that evening to pick up M.R., that he
had seen Purvis and M.R. French kiss and that Purvis
had said that M.R. was a “good lay” or was “good in
bed.” Andes also accurately described Purvis’s home.
The preceding evidence consisted of a victim’s state-
ment, which the arresting officer perceived to be credible
and which was independently verified in material part
by an independent witness. Yet, this was not the only
evidence that Bernabei uncovered before making an
arrest. M.R.’s mother phoned Purvis on November 11,
2004, and allowed Bernabei to listen in without making
his presence known. Purvis adamantly denied having
had sexual intercourse with M.R., but admitted that she
loved him (in a platonic way), that M.R. had been at
her house on two occasions while her husband was away
and that she had told M.R. to lie to his parents about
his being there,2 that she had danced with M.R. at home-
coming and that she had inadvertently shared a kiss
with M.R., which he initiated and had caught her by
surprise and that she had “messed up” by getting too
close to him.
2
In deposition testimony in August, 2007, Purvis denied that
she had instructed M.R. to lie. However, this testimony occurred
after Bernabei arrested her on December 15, 2004, and so does
not go to whether the police officer had probable cause when
he arrested her.
Nos. 09-1098 & 09-1101 19
Bernabei uncovered yet more evidence when he sub-
poenaed M.R.’s and Purvis’s telephone records. They
revealed that the teacher and student had exchanged in
excess of 500 phone calls between January 18 and May 7,
2004. Some of these calls occurred in the early hours of
the morning. On Valentine’s Day, they exchanged 20
phone calls, which amounted to three hours’ speaking
time. In addition to this evidence, Bernabei also spoke
with a number of students, who gave varying accounts
of the truth of the rumors. He also corroborated the
purchase of gifts that M.R. and Purvis had supposedly
given each other.
Probable cause requires only that a probability or a
substantial chance of criminal activity exist. Beauchamp
v. City of Noblesville, Ind., 320 F.3d 733, 743 (7th Cir.
2003); Holmes v. Village of Hoffman Estate, 511 F.3d 673,
679 (7th Cir. 2007). The evidence need not show that the
officer’s belief is more likely true than false. Hughes v.
Mayer, 880 F.2d 967, 969 (7th Cir. 1989). In light of the
preceding, undisputed evidence, it seems inescapable to
us that this standard is satisfied. Bernabei had a written
and highly detailed statement from the alleged victim,
which the latter later echoed in a taped interview and
which was independently corroborated by a witness
who could not have been coached. This inculpatory
evidence was bolstered by considerable circumstantial
evidence. We find that it easily meets the standard of
probable cause.
The district court gave short shrift to the preceding,
undisputed evidence, focusing instead on evidence uncov-
20 Nos. 09-1098 & 09-1101
ered by Bernabei that potentially served to undermine
the inculpatory evidence. The court was, of course, cor-
rect to construe all contested evidence in the light most
favorable to the non-moving party and also to draw all
reasonable inferences from undisputed facts in the light
most favorable to the nonmoving party. Harney v.
Speedway SuperAmerica, L.L.C., 526 F.3d 1099, 1104 (7th
Cir. 2008). But even viewed in this light, the record
could not support a jury finding that Bernabei lacked
probable cause. Ultimately, the district court overstepped
in finding that Purvis had “by the barest of margins”
presented a genuine issue of material fact as to whether
Bernabei had probable cause.
In considering the factors that proved controlling to
the district court, it is worth emphasizing that there is a
difference between evidence of the kind that negates
proof beyond a reasonable doubt and that which is so
significant as to undo the existence of probable cause.
As noted above, the evidence required to establish proba-
ble cause is considerably less than that required to
sustain a criminal conviction. See Braun v. Baldwin, 346
F.3d 761, 766 (7th Cir. 2003) (“Probable cause is not
proof beyond a reasonable doubt, or even proof by a
preponderance of the evidence.”). Ultimately, of course,
the exculpatory evidence unearthed proved sufficient to
earn Purvis an acquittal following a bench trial. But as
we now explain, it did not result in Bernabei’s lacking
probable cause to arrest Purvis.
The first factor relied upon by the district court was that
Bernabei knew that M.R. had initially denied the rumors
Nos. 09-1098 & 09-1101 21
when questioned by school officials. This, of course, is
relevant evidence going to the question of Purvis’s
guilt, but this fact’s impact should not be exaggerated.
After all, a student’s initial hesitancy to reveal the story
of his illicit affair with a teacher should hardly be sur-
prising. While it is exculpatory, it hardly suffices to undo
the fact of probable cause when viewed in light of the
extensive inculpatory evidence discussed above. See
Spiegel v. Cortese, 196 F.3d 717, 724-25 (7th Cir. 1999).
Second, the district court noted evidence that Bernabei
knew that M.R. was working as a paid police informant.
This injects a further twist into an already bizarre case
and could certainly evidence possible bias. But standing
alone, and even viewed in the light most favorable to
Purvis, it does not negate the existence of probable cause,
which does not even require “proof [of guilt] by a prepon-
derance of the evidence.” Braun, 346 F.3d at 766. Even
if one discounts the reliability of M.R.’s statements, it
bears noting that certain, important details of those
statements were corroborated by a third party, Andes.
There is also the significant matter of the voluminous
circumstantial evidence of an improper relationship,
from the telephone records to Purvis’s own admissions
on the phone to M.R.’s mother.
Third, the district court put weight on the fact that M.R.
lied to Bernabei about not contacting Purvis after his
November 10, 2004 interview with the police officer.
Indeed, evidence suggests that M.R. contacted her the
very same day as his interview and then again on Novem-
ber 15 to warn her that he had told the police that they
22 Nos. 09-1098 & 09-1101
had had a sexual relationship. This clearly goes to M.R.’s
credibility, but it seems to us that this evidence might be
more accurately characterized as impeaching, rather than
exculpatory. In light of the strong, inculpatory evidence
discussed above, the victim’s impulse to protect the
teacher with whom he may have had an affair cannot
fairly be said to nullify probable cause.
Fourth, the district court found fault with Bernabei’s
reporting of the contents of the telephone conversation
between M.R.’s mother and Purvis. Specifically, the
court observed that Bernabei “reported the contents of
the conversation in a way that cast the conversation as
corroborative of a sexual relationship.” Yet, Bernabei’s
report began by noting that Purvis had repeatedly
denied having sexual intercourse with M.R. In any event,
many details unearthed during this particular phone
conversation suggest an inappropriate relationship be-
tween M.R. and Purvis, such as her admitting that they
had kissed, her inviting him to her house while her hus-
band was away and her telling him to lie to his parents
about it. The substance of the phone call, it would seem
to us, added to rather than detracted from the evidence
supporting probable cause to arrest Purvis.
Next, the court focused on M.R.’s somewhat implau-
sible claim that he “came” nine times in the course of a
few hours while having sex with Purvis. Evidence exists
that Bernabei told M.R. that this claim was incredible
a month or two before trial. The district court thought
that this conversation, viewed in the light most favorable
to Purvis, suggests that Bernabei did not find this claim
Nos. 09-1098 & 09-1101 23
to be reliable prior to his arresting the plaintiff. This
evidence could of course be used to impeach M.R., but
implausible boasts of sexual prowess by a teenage boy
would hardly be unprecedented. A reasonable police
officer could discount such an assertion as hyperbolic
grandstanding, while still finding credible the under-
lying claim of interest, namely that M.R. and Purvis
had had a sexual relationship.
Sixth, the district court was concerned with Bernabei’s
reporting of his interviews with various students at
Hall High School concerning their views on the accuracy
of the rumors that had circulated about M.R. and Purvis.
Specifically, Bernabei’s report omitted non-corrobora-
tive information, such as some students’ denials of a
sexual relationship between the two, one student’s state-
ment that M.R. had said that he was going to get Purvis
for what she had done to him and Oest’s note that
“[p]eople made up stuff.” While selective reporting is
certainly problematic, at least two factors lead us to
believe that the evidence obtained from the students
was not sufficiently exculpatory as to nullify probable
cause. First, one might reasonably question the reliability
of high-school-student testimony as to the validity of
circulating rumors. Second, the fact that some students
believed the rumors and some did not does not undo the
significant inculpatory evidence Bernabei unearthed
from other sources.
Seventh, evidence existed that M.R. had stolen the
plaintiff’s internet, instant-messaging password and had
used it to impersonate Purvis in conversations with
24 Nos. 09-1098 & 09-1101
Purvis’s mother to obtain personal information. There
was also evidence that Purvis had spoken in class about
the location and design of her tattoo, such that M.R.’s
knowledge of it did not necessarily show that he had
had intimate relations with her. Moreover, some evidence
suggests that M.R. had found out about Purvis’s vibrator
from a fellow student who had accidentally discovered
it while babysitting for Purvis’s daughter. In addition,
Purvis complained that some of her personal effects had
been stolen from her desk at school. Construing this
evidence in the light most favorable to Purvis, in conjunc-
tion with the undisputed facts in the record, it does not
follow that Bernabei lacked probable cause. It certainly
goes some way toward establishing a reasonable doubt
as to Purvis’s guilt, but M.R.’s specific testimony, cor-
roborated by an independent witness, and buttressed
by considerable circumstantial evidence in the form of
phone records and otherwise, establishes a substantial
chance that criminal activity had occurred. Beauchamp,
320 F.3d at 743.
The last factor relied upon by the district court involved
perceived shortcomings in Bernabei’s investigation. These
involved his failure immediately to investigate the class-
room storage area where M.R. and Purvis supposedly
first had sex, his delay in searching Purvis’s home and
computer and his failure to examine M.R.’s home com-
puter. With respect to the storage area, Bernabei aptly
points out that the sexual encounter was alleged to have
taken place more than half a year before. It is not clear
what kind of evidence one would expect to find after
Nos. 09-1098 & 09-1101 25
such an interval. With respect to the computers and
home search, it would seem that the district court may
have envisioned a flawless and fully comprehensive
investigation’s being a prerequisite to Bernabei’s having
probable cause to arrest Purvis. Such is clearly not the
case, for we have long recognized that “the law does not
require that a police officer conduct an incredibly
detailed investigation at the probable cause stage.” Gerald
M. v. Connelly, 858 F.2d 378, 381 (7th Cir. 1988).
Ultimately, no investigation is perfect, but given the
totality of the circumstances, the record makes clear that
Bernabei had probable cause to arrest Purvis, even when
it is viewed in the best possible light for her. To find
otherwise on the record before us would be to sub-
ject police officers to “potentially disabling threats of
liability.” Tangqwall v. Stuckey, 135 F.3d 510, 514 (7th Cir.
1998).
We note in closing that, even if we were wrong in this
regard and Bernabei in fact lacked probable cause to
arrest Purvis, a reasonable officer could have believed
that probable cause existed, even if that belief were ulti-
mately mistaken. See Wheeler, 539 F.3d at 639. A police
officer faced with the evidence unearthed by Bernabei
could not be characterized as “plainly incompetent” in
concluding that probable cause existed to arrest Purvis.
Id.; see also Malley v. Briggs, 475 U.S. 335, 349 (1986). Even
on this alternative ground, then, Bernabei is entitled to
qualified immunity.
26 Nos. 09-1098 & 09-1101
CONCLUSION
The present case involves a most unfortunate series
of events that raise a variety of challenging legal and
factual questions. We agree with the district court that
plaintiff has raised a genuine question of material fact
whether the school’s appointment of a potentially biased
individual to investigate the rumors involving Purvis and
M.R. so fundamentally corrupted the ensuing investiga-
tion as to amount to a due-process violation. Perhaps, if
given the occasion, a jury would determine that Vicini
did not in fact harbor resentment against Purvis and that
the school investigation was carried out in a neutral
fashion. It is also possible, and perhaps even likely, that
a jury would find the police and DCFS investigations to
be sufficiently independent that any conceivable bias in
the initial, school investigation was neutralized. But the
important point is that both issues require determina-
tions involving contested issues of fact and these are
within the exclusive province of the jury.
Nevertheless, the district court erred in concluding
that Oest, Vicini and Lunn are not entitled to qualified
immunity. It is clear that the superintendent, Oest, is so
entitled because he was not aware of any conflict of
interest. As for Vicini and Lunn, there was no federal
law clearly establishing that a biased person causing a
teacher to be reported to the police, DCFS or similar
entity would violate her constitutional rights when that
entity would conduct an independent investigation to
determine the validity of the accusation against her. Vicini
and Lunn are therefore entitled to qualified immunity
and, hence, summary judgment.
Nos. 09-1098 & 09-1101 27
Finally, the record in the present case, even viewed in
the light most reasonable to the plaintiff, establishes that
Bernabei had probable cause to arrest Purvis as a matter
of law and that there was no constitutional violation.
Thus, we reverse the district court’s decision not to
grant summary judgment in favor of Bernabei.
The judgment of the district court is therefore
R EVERSED.
8-2-10