United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
No. 02-1053
RICHARD HATCH, JR.,
Plaintiff, Appellant,
v.
TOWN OF MIDDLETOWN;
FINANCE DIRECTOR FOR THE TOWN OF MIDDLETOWN;
SHAWN J. BROWN; FRANK KLUTH;
BARRY SMITH; and DAVID LEONARD,
Defendants, Appellees.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND
[Hon. Ernest C. Torres, U.S. District Judge]
Before
Torruella, Circuit Judge,
B. Fletcher,* Senior Circuit Judge,
and Lipez, Circuit Judge.
Joseph R. Palumbo, Jr. for appellant.
Marc DeSisto, with whom Kathleen M. Powers was on brief for
appellees.
November 19, 2002
____________________
* Hon. Betty B. Fletcher, of the Ninth Circuit, sitting by
designation.
LIPEZ, Circuit Judge. On April 27, 2000, Plaintiff
Richard Hatch was arrested by the Middletown, Rhode Island police
department and charged with assaulting his adopted son ("John
Doe").1 There was immediate media interest in the arrest due to
Hatch's impending television appearance on the reality game show
Survivor during its premier season. Although the police initially
released only a redacted copy of Hatch's arrest report to the
press, the National Enquirer soon procured Hatch's redacted mug
shot and a copy of his son's statement to the police, featuring
both in an article published on May 16, 2000. Hatch subsequently
filed this § 1983 and state law action against the Town of
Middletown, Shawn J. Brown, Frank Kluth, Barry Smith, David Leonard
and other unnamed police officers in the United States District
Court, claiming Fourth Amendment violations arising from a false
arrest and violations of his right to privacy under federal and
state law.
The district court initially granted defendants' summary
judgment motion in part, dismissing Hatch's Fourth Amendment claim,
his constitutionally-grounded 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claim, and his state
law privacy claims against all defendants except unidentified
officers. With respect to the claims against Captain Leonard and
Lieutenant Smith, the court determined that the individual police
1
Ultimately, the state dropped the assault charges against
Hatch after a Rhode Island Family Court concluded that there was no
probable cause to believe that the child had been abused.
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officers could assert qualified immunity to escape civil liability
under Rhode Island's privacy statute. The court at first denied
defendants' motion for summary judgment on the state law privacy
claims against various unnamed police officers who allegedly
released Hatch's mug shot and excerpts of the statement made to the
police by appellant's son. The judge issued an Order to Show Cause
why the case should not be dismissed since the only remaining
defendants were unidentified officers. Hatch failed to answer the
Order to Show Cause, and the district court dismissed the case.
Hatch now appeals only his state law privacy claims
against Captain Leonard and Lieutenant Smith.2 After reviewing the
2
When Hatch originally sought redress in the district court
under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for alleged violations of his federal right
to privacy, the district court exercised supplemental jurisdiction
over appellant's pendent state law privacy claims. See 28 U.S.C.
§ 1367 (1993). We retain jurisdiction over Hatch's state law
claims on appeal even though Hatch has not appealed his federal
privacy claims. See United Int'l Holdings, Inc. v. Wharf Holdings
Ltd., 210 F.3d 1207, 1219-20 (10th Cir. 2000) ("The scope of a
federal court's jurisdictional power . . . does not fluctuate with
the fate of a federal claim at trial or on appeal, but exists if
the federal claim initially had substance sufficient to confer
subject matter jurisdiction on the [district] court.").
The Tenth Circuit subsequently observed that "[a] federal
claim is insubstantial, and incapable of conferring jurisdiction,
only if it is obviously without merit or is wholly frivolous, or is
clearly foreclosed by prior decisions of the Supreme Court." Id.
at 1220 (internal citations omitted). Appellees do not argue that
the district court abused its discretion in exercising supplemental
jurisdiction over Hatch's state law claims, and our review of the
record does not indicate that Hatch's federal privacy claims were
sufficiently devoid of merit to vitiate federal subject matter
jurisdiction over Hatch's state law claims on appeal. See
Pejepscot Indus. Park, Inc. v. Maine Cent. R.R. Co., 215 F.3d 195,
200 (1st Cir. 2000) (noting that standard of review for
supplemental jurisdiction determinations is abuse of discretion).
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record, we agree with the district court that Captain Leonard acted
reasonably in the face of two conflicting state statutes, and
further conclude that Hatch has failed to establish a claim for
violation of privacy against Lieutenant Smith under Rhode Island's
Privacy Statute. Accordingly, we affirm the decision of the
district court.
I. BACKGROUND
The events leading up to Richard Hatch's arrest are well
documented in Hatch v. Dep't for Children, Youth & Their Families
(Hatch I), 274 F.3d 12 (1st Cir. 2001).3 We briefly recount them
here before turning to the post-arrest period. On the morning of
April 27, 2000, a teacher and nurse at John's elementary school
noticed that John had a bump on his forehead and red marks across
his neck. John disclosed that he had sustained the injuries during
an early morning run with his father. According to John, he was
having trouble keeping the pace set by the appellant, causing him
to fall to the pavement. John claimed that Hatch reacted by first
pulling the boy up by his earlobe and then forcing him to do
pushups by grabbing his neck and pushing his head into the cement.
3
In Hatch I, Richard Hatch brought suit against the Rhode
Island Department for Children, Youth, and Their Families and two
agency caseworkers, seeking monetary damages for alleged violations
of his due process right to uninterrupted custody of his child. We
affirmed the district court's grant of summary judgment for
defendants after determining that the Eleventh Amendment barred
Hatch's suit against the agency, and that the caseworkers were
entitled to qualified immunity.
-4-
After hearing John's story, school officials contacted the Rhode
Island Department for Children, Youth and Their Families (DCYF) and
the Middletown police. Two police officers brought John to the
Middletown police station, where he was interviewed by a DCYF
caseworker and examined by a doctor. The police then contacted
Hatch and asked him to report to the police station. Upon his
arrival he was arrested and charged with assaulting his son. The
next day, Captain David Leonard, the Public Information Officer for
the Middletown police, redacted a copy of plaintiff's arrest report
and released it to the media. The information withheld from the
report included the mug shot of the plaintiff and the
identification of the child.
Over the next few days Captain Leonard fielded requests
from the local and national media for Hatch's arrest report and
arraignment information. After the initial media blitz, Lieutenant
Barry Smith received a call from the National Enquirer. He
informed the Enquirer that "the bump on the boy's head was the size
of an egg. He had red marks on his neck and other bruises." A May
16, 2000 article reporting Hatch's arrest included this comment as
well as the mug shot withheld from his arrest report and large
excerpts of John's statement to the police. Lieutenant Smith
denied having released the mug shot or John's statement to the
National Enquirer. Although appellees concede that this release
was a violation of department policy, Hatch offered no evidence to
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implicate Lieutenant Smith or any other Middletown police officer
in the unauthorized release of these materials.
The district court granted defendants' summary judgment
motion and dismissed Hatch's false arrest and privacy claims. In
this appeal, Hatch challenges the district court's bench ruling
that the two police officers were entitled to qualified immunity
given the uncertainty under Rhode Island law as to what information
concerning Hatch's arrest could be released as a public record:
That would be a very difficult question
because there's two statutes that seem to
conflict here . . . . Given those conflicting
statutes and given the fact that Mr. Hatch's
privacy right under Rhode Island law arises
from a statute that requires, among other
things, that the fact be a private fact, it
seems to me that it is totally unreasonable
and unrealistic to expect that a reasonable
officer, under these circumstances, would have
recognized that releasing this information
violated some right of Mr. Hatch's if, in
fact, it did.
We review the district court's grant of summary judgment de novo,
Kelley v. LaForce, 288 F.3d 1, 4 (1st Cir. 2002), and begin our
analysis by examining the relevant Rhode Island statutes.
II. DISCUSSION
A. The Dissemination of Arrest Information Under Rhode Island Law
Appellant bases his state cause of action on Rhode Island
General Laws § 9-1-28.1(b) (the "Privacy Statute"), which states in
relevant part:
Every person who subjects or causes to be
subjected any citizen of this state . . . to a
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deprivation and/or violation of his or her
right to privacy shall be liable to the party
injured in an action at law, suit in equity,
or any other appropriate proceedings for
redress in either the superior court or
district court of this state.
To recover civil damages for a privacy violation, the plaintiff
must establish that:
(A) There has been some publication of a private
fact;
(B) The fact which has been made public must be one
which would be offensive or objectionable to a
reasonable man of ordinary sensibilities.
R.I. Gen. Laws § 9-1-28.1(a)(3)(i).
For a fact to be "private" within the meaning of the
statute, "plaintiffs must demonstrate that they actually expected
a disclosed fact to remain private, and that society would
recognize this expectation of privacy as reasonable and be willing
to respect it." Pontbriand v. Sundlun, 699 A.2d 856, 865 (R.I.
1997). While this standard frequently presents questions of fact,
the Supreme Court of Rhode Island has categorically determined that
plaintiffs have no reasonable expectation of privacy with respect
to information contained in a public record: "[I]t is clear that
the statutory right to privacy in Rhode Island does not extend to
those records deemed public." Doe v. Edward A. Sherman Publ'g Co.,
593 A.2d 457, 459 (R.I. 1991). Consequently, the critical issue in
this case is whether Hatch's arrest report is considered a public
record under Rhode Island law. The parties point us to two
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statutes that bear on the classification of this information -- the
Rhode Island Access to Public Records ("Public Records") Statute
that compels the release of all arrest records, and the Child Abuse
Statute that requires all records concerning reports of child abuse
to be kept confidential.4
1. The Rhode Island Access to Public Records Statute
Of the two statutes that potentially govern the status of
Richard Hatch's arrest information, only the Public Records Statute
refers specifically to arrest records. See R.I. Gen. Laws § 38-2-
2(4)(i)(D). The statute narrowly circumscribes the universe of
records maintained by law enforcement agencies that are not
considered public records, providing that "records shall not be
deemed public only to the extent that the disclosure of the records
or information . . . (c) could reasonably be expected to constitute
an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy." Id. However, this
provision concludes with the following caveat: "Records relating to
management and direction of a law enforcement agency and records or
reports reflecting the initial arrest of an adult and the charge or
charges brought against an adult shall be public." Id. (emphasis
added).
The significance of classifying particular documents as
"public records" under Rhode Island law is twofold. First, any
4
The relevant provisions of these two statutes and the Rhode
Island Privacy Statute are reproduced in the Appendix at the end of
this opinion.
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person is entitled to review and/or duplicate public records under
reasonable conditions prescribed by the custodian: "Except as
provided in § 38-3-2(4), all records maintained or kept on file by
any public body . . . shall be public records and every person or
entity shall have the right to inspect and/or copy those records at
such reasonable time as may be determined by the custodian
thereof." R.I. Gen. Laws § 38-2-3(a). Hence, sections 38-2-
2(4)(i)(D) and 38-2-3(a) impose an affirmative obligation on law
enforcement agencies to make arrest records available to the
public. Second, as noted above, a determination that particular
records are public is dispositive as to any privacy claims arising
from the release of those records. Edward A. Sherman Publ'g, 593
A.2d at 458.
2. The Rhode Island Child Abuse Statute
Recognizing that certain state or federal laws may impose
confidentiality requirements with respect to specific information,
the Public Records Statute places that information outside the
scope of Title 38: "For the purposes of this chapter, the following
records shall not be deemed public . . . (S) Records, reports,
opinions, information, and statements required to be kept
confidential by federal law or regulation or state law, or rule of
court." R.I. Gen. Laws § 38-2-2(4)(i)(S).
The Rhode Island Child Abuse Statute arguably functions
as such a law. Without explicitly mentioning arrest records, the
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statute provides that "[a]ll records concerning reports of child
abuse and neglect, including reports made to the department,5 shall
be confidential except as specifically provided by this chapter .
. . ." R.I. Gen. Laws § 40-11-13(a). The subsequent clause of the
provision imposes penalties for the disclosure of these records,
but limits the class of people subject to punishment: "Any employee
or agent of the department violating any of the provisions of this
section shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and shall be fined not
more than two hundred dollars ($200) or shall be imprisoned for not
more than six (6) months or both." R.I. Gen. Laws § 40-11-13(b).
3. Interpreting the Public Records and Child Abuse
Statutes
Read together, the Public Records and Child Abuse
Statutes are susceptible to at least three reasonable
interpretations. Appellees observe that § 38-2-2(4)(i)(D) of the
Public Records Statute classifies all "records or reports
reflecting the initial arrest of an adult and the charge or charges
brought against an adult" as public documents. They argue that
because Hatch's arrest record clearly falls within the scope of
this provision, Captain Leonard and Lieutenant Smith only divulged
information that was already deemed public under Rhode Island law.
Appellees further assert that § 40-11-13 of the Child Abuse Statute
5
The "department" referred to in § 40-11-13(a) is defined
earlier in Chapter 11 of Title 40 as the DCYF. R.I. Gen. Laws §
40-11-2.
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does not specifically refer to arrest records in its
confidentiality provision, and by its terms in subsections (a) and
(b) appears only to encompass DCYF records and personnel rather
than the records of a local police department. Hence, the Child
Abuse Statute does not undermine the public status of the arrest
information in the records of the Middletown police department.
Alternatively, the language of § 40-11-13(a) of the Child
Abuse Statute emphasizes that "all records concerning reports of
child abuse and neglect, including reports made to the department,
shall be confidential . . . ." R.I. Gen. Laws § 40-11-13(a)
(emphasis added). Significantly, the phrase "all records" in § 40-
11-13(a) is not modified by any language restricting the
confidentiality requirement to DCYF records or personnel. Thus the
Child Abuse Statute might be precisely the kind of confidentiality
statute contemplated by § 38-2-2(4)(i)(S) of the Public Records
Statute, which removes particular records from its purview if
another law mandates that the records remain confidential. Under
this reading of the statutes, § 40-11-13 of the Child Abuse Statute
creates an exception to the final sentence of § 38-2-2(4)(i)(D) of
the Public Records Statute, and prohibits the release of any
information concerning reports of child abuse.
Hatch forgoes this hardline stance in favor of a third
interpretation of the statutes. Focusing on the language of § 38-
2-2(4)(i)(D) of the Public Records Statute, he argues that the
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phrase "records or reports reflecting the initial arrest of an
adult and charges brought against [him]" only authorizes the
disclosure of a skeletal account of the arrest consistent with the
provision's denial of public record status to information that
"could reasonably be expected to constitute an unwarranted invasion
of personal privacy." To the extent that any information beyond
Richard Hatch's name and a simple recitation of the charge was
released to the media, Hatch insists that his right to privacy was
violated.
We find no guidance in the statutes or common law of
Rhode Island to aid us in determining what level of detail runs
afoul of the "reflecting" language in § 38-2-2(4)(i)(D) of the
Public Records Statute. Indeed, the reasonableness of all three
interpretations illustrates the difficulties faced by Rhode Island
police officers unsure as to whether an arrest record containing a
report of child abuse is considered a public record.
B. Qualified Immunity
1. General Principles
We observed in Hatch I that "the law strives to balance
its desire to compensate those whose rights are infringed by state
actors with an equally compelling desire to shield public servants
from undue interference with the performance of their duties and
from threats of liability which, though unfounded, may nevertheless
be unbearably disruptive." Hatch, 274 F.3d at 20 (quoting
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Buenrostro v. Collazo, 973 F.2d 39, 42 (1st Cir. 1992)). In the §
1983 context, the United States Supreme Court has struck this
balance by applying a two-part test to determine whether plaintiffs
may hold government officials civilly liable for alleged violations
of constitutional and federal statutory rights:
[A]ppellate assessment of a qualified immunity
claim is apportioned into two analytic
components. First, if the right asserted by
the plaintiff was "clearly established" at the
time of its alleged violation, we are required
to assume that the right was recognized by the
defendant official, see Harlow [v.
Fitzgerald], 457 U.S. [800,] 818 [(1982)];
Rodriguez v. Comas, 888 F.2d 899, 901 (1st
Cir. 1989); second, we will deny the immunity
claim if a reasonable official situated in the
same circumstances should have understood that
the challenged conduct violated that
established right, see Anderson [v.
Creighton], 483 U.S. [635,] 640-41 [(1987)];
Rodriguez, 888 F.2d at 901.
Burns v. Loranger, 907 F.2d 233, 235-36 (1st Cir. 1990); see also
Camilo-Robles v. Zapata, 175 F.3d 41, 43 (1st Cir. 1999); Aponte
Matos v. Toledo Davila, 135 F.3d 182, 186 (1st Cir. 1998).
Both prongs of this standard afford government officials
some degree of protection when they confront statutory ambiguity
while executing their official duties. If we assume that state
officers in Rhode Island may seek the same qualified immunity from
state law actions that is available to state officials sued under
§ 1983, the contradictory provisions in the case at bar in the
Public Records and Child Abuse statutes undermine Hatch's claim
that his rights were "clearly established" with respect to the
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narrow question of whether police officers are prohibited from
releasing arrest reports containing information of child abuse. As
we observed in Aponte Matos, this resolution of the first prong is
sufficient to support a finding of qualified immunity. Aponte
Matos, 135 F.3d at 187. Alternatively, under the objective
"reasonable officer" standard embodied in the second prong, Captain
Leonard and Lieutenant Smith are strong candidates for qualified
immunity given the absence of any basis for a "reasonable officer"
to conclude that one of the three interpretations outlined above is
the only correct one.
However, before we can conclude that the two police
officers are entitled to qualified immunity, we must examine our
earlier assumption that Rhode Island provides immunity in state law
actions comparable to the immunity that state officers enjoy in §
1983 cases, and determine whether this is actually the case.
2. Qualified Immunity Under Rhode Island Law
Although counsel for Hatch conceded at oral argument that
qualified immunity is available to state officers defending claims
under Rhode Island law, there is no decision from the Supreme Court
of Rhode Island expressly affording government officials common law
immunity from state law claims. Nonetheless, Rhode Island's high
court has left little doubt that the defense exists for state
officers under certain circumstances. In Pontbriand, the Governor
of Rhode Island released the account information of bank depositors
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to encourage the state legislature to pass legislation compensating
depositors in state banks and credit unions that were closed
because they had no federal deposit insurance. Pontbriand, 699
A.2d 856. The account holders brought suit alleging violations of
their right to privacy under state law, prompting the Governor to
claim that he was entitled to "good faith" immunity even if his
actions violated the state privacy statute. Id. Reviewing the
availability of this defense, the court observed that "[a]lthough
not extensively discussed in our prior cases, it seems beyond doubt
that the Governor may be entitled to some form of common law
immunity for his acts performed in good faith." Pontbriand, 699
A.2d at 867 (original emphasis) (citing Harlow v. Fitzgerald, 457
U.S. 800, 813-19 (1982), and Scheuer v. Rhodes, 416 U.S. 232, 247-
48 (1974)). The court declined to rule on the availability of
immunity, observing that "the issue was neither extensively briefed
by the parties nor reached by the trial justice below."
Pontbriand, 699 A.2d at 867. However, the court signaled the trial
judge that barring plaintiffs' claims on grounds of qualified
immunity remained an option on remand: "[W]e are of the opinion
that the determination regarding whether official qualified
immunity exists should be left for determination upon remand." Id.
Two years after issuing its decision in Pontbriand, the
Supreme Court of Rhode Island addressed qualified immunity in a
context similar to the facts of this case. See Ensey v. Culhane,
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727 A.2d 687 (R.I. 1999). Ensey was falsely accused by his ex-
girlfriend of kidnaping and raping her at gunpoint.
Notwithstanding the existence of facts strongly suggesting the
plaintiff's innocence, the police obtained an arrest warrant and
issued a verbal press statement revealing Ensey's identity, the
charges, and the facts surrounding the investigation. After the
police uncovered the fabrication, plaintiff filed suit against the
Superintendent of the State Police and ten unnamed police officers,
alleging a host of violations of his state and federal
constitutional rights and his right to privacy under Rhode Island
law. The Supreme Court of Rhode Island made the following comments
in reviewing the defendants' assertion of qualified immunity:
[D]efendants argue that the doctrine of
qualified immunity, an immunity typically
afforded to government officials on the
federal level, bars plaintiff's claims. We
are of the opinion that, in an appropriate
case, the doctrine of qualified immunity might
well be applied by this Court. See Harlow v.
Fitzgerald, 457 U.S. 800, 818 (1982)
("government officials performing
discretionary functions, generally are
shielded from liability for civil damages
insofar as their conduct does not violate
clearly established statutory or
constitutional rights of which a reasonable
person would have known").
Id. at 690-91. However, because Ensey could not identify the
police officers who allegedly violated his rights during the
investigation, the court did not reach the question of whether
particular state officers were entitled to qualified immunity.
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Significantly, Pontbriand and Ensey reflect Rhode
Island's recognition of a qualified immunity defense under state
law analogous to the federal doctrine established by the United
States Supreme Court in Harlow v. Fitzgerald, cited with approval
in both Rhode Island decisions, and routinely applied in § 1983
cases. Hence, we conclude that Hatch's concession that qualified
immunity is available to officers defending state law claims is
well grounded in the law of Rhode Island.
3. Captain Leonard and Lieutenant Smith
Captain Leonard had to navigate between two statutes,
both of which purported to bestow individual rights on a segment of
the population. The Public Records Statute expressly grants
individuals the right to inspect and/or duplicate any documents
that are classified as public records, including "records or
reports reflecting the initial arrest of an adult and the charge or
charges brought against an adult . . . ." R.I. Gen. Laws § 38-2-
2(4)(i)(D). The Child Abuse Statute protects the parties to an
alleged incident of child abuse by preserving the confidentiality
of all records documenting the event. R.I. Gen. Laws § 40-11-
13(a). Hence, if Captain Leonard had interpreted § 40-11-13 of the
Child Abuse Statute to prohibit the release of Hatch's arrest
record in its entirety, members of the media could have
legitimately argued that the police department had violated the
Public Records Statute. Given these uncertainties under Rhode
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Island law, Captain Leonard did not violate any clearly established
right of Hatch to the privacy of the information released to the
media by Leonard. Accordingly, we find that Leonard is entitled to
qualified immunity under Rhode Island law.
As for Lieutenant Smith, we do not even have to reach the
issue of qualified immunity. His minor embellishments of the
arrest report, while probably ill-advised, did not divulge new
information. Instead, he merely characterized facts contained in
a document that had previously been released to the media. Once
Captain Leonard released the report to the press, Hatch could no
longer maintain the expectation that the details contained in the
publicized report would remain private. Swerdlick v. Koch, 721
A.2d 849, 859 (R.I. 1998) ("There is no liability [for publication
of private facts] when the defendant merely gives further publicity
to information about the plaintiff that is already public.")
(quoting Restatement (Second) Torts, § 652D cmt. b). Hence,
Smith's subsequent release of information to the National Enquirer
cannot form the basis of a claim under Rhode Island's Privacy
Statute.
Hatch's complaint also names the Town of Middletown as a
defendant. However, his arguments to the district court throughout
the summary judgment phase and before us focus entirely on the
liability of Captain Leonard and Lieutenant Smith to the exclusion
of the Town. Indeed, appellant's brief contains only two opaque
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references to the Town's policies, without any elaboration of a
theory of municipal liability. We will not address a claim
developed so perfunctorily.6 Ryan v. Royal Ins. Co. of Am., 916
F.2d 731, 734 (1st Cir. 1990) ("It is settled in this circuit that
issues adverted to on appeal in a perfunctory manner, unaccompanied
by some developed argumentation, are deemed to have been
abandoned.").
Accordingly, the district court's entry of summary
judgment in favor of the defendants is affirmed.
So ordered.
6
There are also vague and undeveloped references to unnamed
police officers in appellant's brief. With regard to the officers
who allegedly released Hatch's mug shot and John Doe's statement to
the police, we note that the district court's initial grant of
partial summary judgment left open the possibility that Hatch could
proceed to trial against these officers. However, Hatch's failure
to proffer any evidence identifying the officers responsible for
the release of these materials led the district court to dismiss
this element of his claim as well, and Hatch's brief cannot be read
to challenge this ruling on appeal.
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Appendix
All references below are to provisions of the Rhode Island General
Laws (2001).
9-1-28.1 Right to Privacy -- Action for Deprivation of Right
(a) Right to privacy created. It is the policy
of this state that every person in this
state shall have a right to privacy which
shall be defined to include any of the
following rights individually . . . (3) The
right to be secure from unreasonable
publicity given to one's private life . . .
(i) In order to recover for violation of
this right, it must be established that: (A)
There has been some publication of a private
fact; (B) The fact which has been made
public must be one which would be offensive
or objectionable to a reasonable man of
ordinary sensibilities . . .
(b) Right of action. Every person who subjects
or causes to be subjected any citizen of
this state or other person within the
jurisdiction thereof to a deprivation and/or
violation of his or her right to privacy
shall be liable to the party injured in an
action at law, suit in equity, or any other
appropriate proceedings for redress in
either the superior court or district court
of this state. The court having
jurisdiction of an action brought pursuant
to this section may award reasonable
attorneys' fees and court costs to the
prevailing party.
38-2-2 Access to Public Records (Definitions)
(4)(i) For the purposes of this chapter, the
following records shall not be deemed public
. . . (D) All records maintained by law
enforcement agencies for criminal law
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enforcement and all records relating to the
detection and investigation of crime,
including those maintained on any individual
or compiled in the course of a criminal
investigation by any law enforcement agency.
Provided, however, such records shall not be
deemed public only to the extent that the
disclosure of the records or information . .
. (c) could reasonably be expected to
constitute an unwarranted invasion of
personal privacy . . . .
Records relating to management and
direction of a law enforcement agency and
records or reports reflecting the initial
arrest of an adult and the charge or charges
brought against an adult shall be public.
38-2-3 Access to Public Records (Right to Inspect and Copy
Records)
(a) Except as provided in § 38-2-2(4), all
records maintained or kept on file by any
public body, whether or not those records
are required by any law or by any rule or
regulation, shall be public records and
every person or entity shall have the right
to inspect and/or copy those records at such
reasonable time as may be determined by the
custodian thereof.
40-11-13 Abused and Neglected Children (Confidentiality of Records
and Reports)
(a) All records concerning reports of child
abuse and neglect, including reports made to
the department, shall be confidential except
as specifically provided by this chapter or
as specifically provided by § 42-72-8 or
specifically authorized by the family court
in furtherance of the purposes directly
connected with this chapter.
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(b) Any employee or agent of the department
violating any of the provisions of this
section shall be guilty of a misdemeanor,
and shall be fined not more than two hundred
dollars ($200) or shall be imprisoned for
not more than six (6) months or both.
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