Kerns v. Bader ( 2011 )


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  •                                                                FILED
    United States Court of Appeals
    Tenth Circuit
    PUBLISH               December 20, 2011
    Elisabeth A. Shumaker
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS            Clerk of Court
    TENTH CIRCUIT
    JASON KERNS; ARCHIE KERNS;
    MARY ANN KERNS,
    Plaintiffs - Appellees,
    v.                                                 No. 09-2273
    (D.C. No. 1:07-CV-00771-JB-ACT)
    Albuquerque Police Department                        (D.N.M.)
    Officers DREW BADER; MATT
    THOMPSON; RUSSELL CARTER, in
    their individual capacities,
    Defendants - Appellants,
    and
    BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS OF
    BERNALILLO COUNTY; Bernalillo
    County Sheriff DARREN WHITE, in
    his individual and his official
    capacity; Bernalillo County Sheriff’s
    Detectives BRIAN LINDLEY;
    RALPH GONZALES; JAMES
    HAMSTEN, in their individual
    capacities; Bernalillo County Sheriff
    Deputies LAWRENCE KOREN;
    SEAN CONNORS; AARON
    WRIGHT; TIMOTHY HIX; RHONDA
    MOYA, in their individual capacities;
    THE CITY OF ALBUQUERQUE;
    Albuquerque Police Department
    Officers ROBERT JOHNSTON;
    JAMES MONTOYA, in their
    individual capacities; Metropolitan
    Forensic Science Center Firearm and
    Tool Mark Examiner MIKE HAAG, in
    his individual capacity; JOHN DOES
    1-10, in their individual capacities,
    Defendants.
    ----------------------------------------
    JASON KERNS; ARCHIE KERNS;
    MARY ANN KERNS,
    Plaintiffs - Appellees,
    v.                                                          No. 10-2103
    (D.C. No. 1:07-CV-00771-JB-ACT)
    BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS OF                                     (D.N.M.)
    BERNALILLO COUNTY;
    BERNALILLO COUNTY SHERIFF
    DARREN WHITE, in his individual
    and his official capacity;
    BERNALILLO COUNTY SHERIFF
    DETECTIVE BRIAN LINDLEY;
    BERNALILLO COUNTY SHERIFF
    DEPUTY, LAWRENCE KOREN,
    Defendants - Appellants,
    and
    BERNALILLO COUNTY SHERIFF’S
    DETECTIVES RALPH GONZALES,
    and JAMES HAMSTEN, in their
    individual capacities; SEAN
    CONNORS, AARON WRIGHT,
    TIMOTHY HIX, and RHONDA
    MOYA, in their individual capacities;
    THE CITY OF ALBUQUERQUE,
    ALBUQUERQUE POLICE
    DEPARTMENT OFFICER DREW
    BADER, MATT THOMPSON,
    RUSSELL CARTER, ROBERT
    -2-
    JOHNSTON and JAMES MONTOYA,
    in their individual capacities;
    METROPOLITAN FORENSIC
    SCIENCE CENTER FIREARM AND
    TOOL MARK EXAMINER MIKE
    HAAG, in his individual capacity; and
    JOHN DOES 1-10, in their individual
    capacities,
    Defendants.
    ---------------------------------------------
    MIKE HAAG; JASON KERNS;
    ARCHIE KERNS; MARY ANN
    KERNS,
    Plaintiffs - Appellees,
    v.
    No. 10-2106
    METROPOLITAN FORENSIC                                 (D.C. No. 1:07-CV-00771-JB-ACT)
    SCIENCE CENTER FIREARM AND                                         (D.N.M.)
    TOOL MARK EXAMINER MIKE
    HAAG, in his individual capacity,
    Defendant - Appellant,
    and
    BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS OF
    BERNALILLO COUNTY,
    BERNALILLO COUNTY
    SHERIFF DARREN WHITE, in his
    individual and his official capacity;
    BERNALILLO COUNTY SHERIFF’S
    DETECTIVES BRIAN LINDLEY,
    RALPH GONZALES, and
    JAMES HAMSTEN, in their
    individual capacities; BERNALILLO
    COUNTY SHERIFF DEPUTIES
    LAWRENCE KOREN, SEAN
    -3-
    CONNORS, AARON WRIGHT,
    TIMOTHY HIX, and RHONDA
    MOYA, in their individual capacities;
    THE CITY OF ALBUQUERQUE,
    ALBUQUERQUE POLICE
    DEPARTMENT OFFICERS DREW
    BADER, MATT THOMPSON,
    RUSSELL CARTER, ROBERT
    JOHNSTON and JAMES MONTOYA,
    in their individual capacities; and
    JOHN DOES 1-10, in their individual
    capacities,
    Defendants.
    Stephanie M. Griffin, Assistant City Attorney, City of Albuquerque Legal
    Department, Albuquerque, New Mexico, and Daniel J. Macke, Robles, Rael &
    Anaya, P.C., for Defendants-Appellants.
    Marc M. Lowry, Rothstein, Donatelli, Hughes, Dahlstrom, Schoenberg &
    Bienvenu, LLP, Albuquerque, New Mexico, for Plaintiffs-Appellees.
    Before O’BRIEN, HOLLOWAY, and GORSUCH, Circuit Judges.
    GORSUCH, Circuit Judge.
    Do we have to decide a qualified immunity appeal involving close
    questions of law that the district court hasn’t yet addressed? Do the police violate
    a suspect’s clearly established rights by requesting his hospital records? And do
    authorities have probable cause to arrest a trained marksman who makes
    -4-
    suspicious statements in the wake of a shooting, who leads officers on a high
    speed chase, and who has a recently concealed rifle shell casing lying at the
    bottom of his trash can? We answer no to the first two questions and yes to the
    last.
    I
    On a summer evening in 2005 a sniper shot down a police helicopter over
    Albuquerque. When the authorities reached the scene, one man stood out. His
    name was Jason Kerns. Mr. Kerns was quick to tell the police that he was
    watching the helicopter from his backyard when it went down — and that he had
    heard a loud, ear-ringing pop just to his left and the sound of rocks kicking up
    nearby. In response to this information, SWAT and K-9 units canvassed the area
    Mr. Kerns described.
    They soon noticed that something seemed amiss when they reached Mr.
    Kerns’s house: a door was ajar, music was playing, no lights were on. Things
    took an even darker turn when the officers noticed a broken window. A silver-
    dollar-sized hole punctured a window of the house, with shattering concentrically
    outward. This, the police thought, might be the result of a gunshot — perhaps by
    the same sniper who had just fired on the police.
    Concerned that an armed suspect might be hiding inside (perhaps even
    holding hostages), three officers — Bader, Thompson, and Carter — attempted to
    make contact with the occupants of the house. No one answered their repeated
    -5-
    knocks. Finding a side door unlocked, Officers Bader, Thompson, and Carter
    announced and entered. Inside they soon encountered Mr. Kerns’s girlfriend,
    Michelle Zisser, who hadn’t heard their knocks. One of the officers explained
    that he was looking for a possible shooting suspect and was concerned the suspect
    might be hiding somewhere inside. Ms. Zisser agreed to let them look around.
    The police did a quick sweep, everything appeared to be in order, and they soon
    left. Indeed, it later turned out that the broken window had been caused by an
    errant golf ball some time before.
    As police continued to investigate, it seemed to them that some of Mr.
    Kerns’s statements didn’t add up. He told police that he had heard a loud clap
    when the helicopter went down. But none of his neighbors reported hearing
    anything like this. He told police that rocks kicked up nearby at the same time.
    But the police couldn’t find a rock bed anywhere near the location Mr. Kerns
    described. Deputy Lindley learned that Mr. Kerns had served in the military as a
    helicopter mechanic and marksmanship instructor. Deputy Lindley also learned
    that Mr. Kerns had been trained to hit man-sized targets up to 2100 feet away —
    and could likely hit a helicopter-sized target at a much greater distance. For his
    part, Mr. Kerns estimated that the helicopter had been less than 1000 feet away
    from his house when it was shot down.
    Later interactions with Mr. Kerns only made him appear more suspect in
    the authorities’ eyes. In a written statement, he admitted that he had been looking
    -6-
    at the helicopter and had been “annoyed” by it. He bragged to Deputy Lindley
    that he would have been able to “make that shot” with “no problem.” He added
    that he had trained to take shots at even greater distances. Deputy Lindley
    prodded Mr. Kerns a bit, asking him whether someone near Mr. Kerns’s house
    would have been able to see the helicopter from that angle. Not missing a beat,
    Mr. Kerns replied that he had been able to see the helicopter just fine, and the
    way it was backlit made it “a great target.” He even explained how the
    helicopter’s red strobe lights gave him an indication of the helicopter’s flight
    path.
    Later, detectives attempted to follow Mr. Kerns in an unmarked car. It
    wasn’t long before Mr. Kerns noticed he was being tailed and began to drive over
    one hundred miles per hour in an admitted attempt to lose the trailing car. As he
    later explained, he thought he was being followed by police and “if they’re just
    watching now, I’m not gonna make it easy for anybody.” Aplt. App. at 215. He
    also told investigators that he suffered from Post Traumatic Stress Disorder
    (PTSD), and that being followed by an unmarked police car had triggered a
    negative reaction. He declined to tell police, however, what other situations
    might prompt his PTSD.
    Eventually, the Bernalillo County Sheriff’s Department executed a warrant
    to search Mr. Kerns’s home for weapons and ammunition. They found plenty of
    both, as well as a silencer, military literature, and several high power rifles they
    -7-
    thought capable of downing a helicopter. One rifle in particular, a Fabrique
    Nationale Model 30.06 bolt-action rifle (“FN rifle”), captured their attention. As
    part of the search, police also examined the trash outside Mr. Kerns’s home.
    There they found something else curious: a spent rifle shell wrapped in tape and
    buried at the bottom of the trash can. Mr. Kerns said the shell was an old one he
    found while cleaning his garage. But analysis of the tape showed that it was
    fresh, neither dry nor dirty. All this suggested to police that someone had
    attempted to conceal the shell and had done so recently.
    While these events were unfolding, Sheriff White began to question
    whether Mr. Kerns could lawfully possess weapons at all. Given Mr. Kerns’s
    admission that he suffered from PTSD, Sheriff White decided to investigate
    whether he had ever been adjudicated to have a mental defect and so unable to
    possess firearms under 
    18 U.S.C. § 922
    (g)(4). In aid of his effort, the Sheriff sent
    a letter to the local Veteran Affairs hospital, where Mr. Kerns had received
    psychiatric treatment, asking for “any and all records possessed by the VA
    pertaining to [Mr. Kerns’s] psychiatric condition as it would apply to 18 U.S.C.
    [§] 922(g)(4).” Aplt. App. at 308. A few days later the hospital voluntarily
    complied.
    Meanwhile, other investigators sought to learn more from the wreckage of
    the helicopter. They evaluated the apparent trajectory of the bullet through the
    helicopter to determine where the bullet had come from, and they retrieved a few
    -8-
    fragments of the bullet itself. Though these fragments were badly mangled, a
    forensic expert, Michael Haag, told investigators that the bullet could have come
    from Mr. Kerns’s FN rifle but not his other high powered rifles. Mr. Haag also
    concluded that the FN rifle fired the spent cartridge retrieved from Mr. Kerns’s
    trash.
    Another investigator, Deputy Koren, was able to retrieve GPS data from the
    crashed helicopter. Using this data, he estimated the direction the helicopter was
    facing at the time it was hit and calculated that the aircraft was about 1670 feet
    from Mr. Kerns’s house. Deputy Koren also combined the entry angle of the
    bullet with an approximation of the helicopter’s altitude at the time of the shot to
    determine how far away the shooter would have been from the helicopter. Putting
    this information together, and performing a bit of trigonometry, he estimated the
    shooter had fired from a distance of about 1630 feet.
    Based on all this, Deputy Lindley prepared an affidavit in support of an
    arrest warrant for Mr. Kerns. In the affidavit, Deputy Lindley explained how Mr.
    Kerns was a former military marksmanship instructor trained to hit man-sized
    targets 2100 feet away. The Deputy noted that, by Mr. Kerns’s estimate, the
    helicopter was less than 1000 feet away at the time it went down. He reported
    that Mr. Kerns had bragged he could have hit the helicopter with “no problem”
    and that it was “a great target.” He recounted how Mr. Kerns had made what
    seemed to be a questionable statement — that he’d heard a loud noise and rocks
    -9-
    kick up to his left, even though none of his neighbors reported hearing anything
    like this and no rock bed could be found in the location Mr. Kerns described. The
    Deputy also wrote of Mr. Kerns’s suspicious behavior, how he had raced at over
    one hundred miles an hour in an attempt to lose following detectives. And he
    reported that a search of Mr. Kerns’s home had yielded several firearms
    (including the FN rifle); boxes of ammunition; at least one silencer; and a spent
    shell casing, freshly wrapped in tape and buried in a trash can.
    Deputy Lindley’s affidavit also included the results of Koren and Haag’s
    forensic work. The affidavit explained that, based on Deputy Koren’s
    calculations, the shooter had been about 1630 feet from the helicopter. Deputy
    Lindley noted that this was within the range of the FN rifle — and that the
    distance from where the helicopter was hovering to Mr. Kerns’s house was
    approximately 1670 feet. Finally, Deputy Lindley reported that the bullet
    fragment taken from the helicopter could have been fired by the FN rifle.
    In light of all this information in Deputy Lindley’s affidavit, an arrest
    warrant was issued and Mr. Kerns was arrested. A few days later, Mr. Haag and
    another witness presented much of the same information to a federal grand jury
    that soon indicted Mr. Kerns.
    But then things took a turn. A forensic expert hired by Mr. Kerns found
    that Mr. Haag’s ballistics report was sorely mistaken — and soon Mr. Haag
    admitted that Mr. Kerns’s FN rifle could not have been the one that shot the
    - 10 -
    helicopter. Deputy Koren’s trajectory analysis came into question as well, with
    competing expert testimony suggesting the shooter had only been 939 feet away,
    and that the bullet may not have come from the direction of Mr. Kerns’s home. In
    light of these developments, the U.S. Attorney dismissed the charges against Mr.
    Kerns.
    It was then these lawsuits followed, proceeding in three essential
    movements. First, Mr. Kerns sued Officers Bader, Thompson, and Carter under
    
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
    , alleging they had violated his Fourth Amendment rights by
    briefly entering his house on the night of the crash. Second, he sued Sheriff
    White, arguing the Sheriff’s efforts to obtain his psychiatric records violated his
    Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment privacy rights. Finally, he accused Deputy
    Lindley, Deputy Koren, and Mr. Haag of false arrest, false imprisonment, and
    malicious prosecution. All the defendants moved for summary judgment on the
    basis of qualified immunity, but the district court denied relief, and the
    defendants now appeal. 1
    II
    1
    Mr. Kerns acknowledges that a district court’s denial of summary
    judgment on grounds of qualified immunity is subject to immediate review when
    the issues appealed are ones of law. But he cautions us that the defendants’
    arguments sometimes seem to him to be rooted in disputed factual issues which
    are not subject to interlocutory review. We proceed mindful of this constraint on
    our jurisdiction and limit the scope of our inquiry to legal challenges to the
    court’s denial of qualified immunity. See Lewis v. Tripp, 
    604 F.3d 1221
    , 1225-26
    (10th Cir. 2010).
    - 11 -
    We begin our analysis with Officers Bader, Thompson, and Carter, each of
    whom insists he is entitled to qualified immunity for his role in the search of Mr.
    Kerns’s house on the night of the crash. Law enforcement officers are, of course,
    entitled to a presumption that they are immune from lawsuits seeking damages for
    conduct they undertook in the course of performing their jobs. “If qualified
    immunity is to mean anything, it must mean that public employees who are just
    doing their jobs are generally immune from suit.” Lewis, 
    604 F.3d at 1230
    .
    A plaintiff can overcome this presumption of immunity only by carrying
    the heavy burden of showing both that (1) the defendant-officer in question
    violated one of his constitutional rights, and (2) the infringed right at issue was
    clearly established at the time of the allegedly unlawful activity such that “every
    reasonable official would have understood that what he [was] doing” violated the
    law. Ashcroft v. al-Kidd, 
    131 S. Ct. 2074
    , 2080, 2083 (2011) (internal quotation
    marks omitted). Failure on either qualified immunity element is fatal to the
    plaintiff’s cause.
    In fact, the Supreme Court has recently instructed that courts should
    proceed directly to, “should address only,” and should deny relief exclusively
    based on the second element, Camreta v. Greene, 
    131 S. Ct. 2020
    , 2032 (2011),
    in seven particular circumstances outlined in Pearson v. Callahan, 
    555 U.S. 223
    ,
    236-42 (2009) — namely when (1) the first, constitutional violation question “is
    so factbound that the decision provides little guidance for future cases”; (2) “it
    - 12 -
    appears that the question will soon be decided by a higher court”; (3) deciding the
    constitutional question requires “an uncertain interpretation of state law”; (4)
    “qualified immunity is asserted at the pleading stage” and “the precise factual
    basis for the . . . claim . . . may be hard to identify”; (5) tackling the first element
    “may create a risk of bad decisionmaking” due to inadequate briefing; (6)
    discussing both elements risks “bad decisionmaking” because the court is firmly
    convinced the law is not clearly established and is thus inclined to give little
    thought to the existence of the constitutional right; or (7) the doctrine of
    “constitutional avoidance” suggests the wisdom of passing on the first
    constitutional question because “it is plain that a constitutional right is not clearly
    established but far from obvious whether in fact there is such a right.” See also
    Morgan v. Swanson, 
    659 F.3d 359
    , 385 (5th Cir. 2011) (en banc).
    With respect to the last consideration, constitutional avoidance, the
    Supreme Court has told us that courts may “avoid avoidance” — and so answer
    the first qualified immunity question before proceeding to the second — in cases
    involving a recurring fact pattern where guidance on the constitutionality of the
    challenged conduct is required and the conduct is only likely to be challenged
    within the qualified immunity regime. Camreta, 
    131 S. Ct. at
    2031 & n.5. But
    the Court has also told us that this should be the exception, not the rule — that as
    a general matter, constitutional avoidance considerations trump and “courts
    - 13 -
    should think hard, and then think hard again, before turning small cases into large
    ones.” 
    Id. at 2032
    .
    Before the district court the officers argued that Mr. Kerns’s claims fell
    short on both aspects of the qualified immunity test. They argued that the exigent
    circumstances posed by the nearby shooting of a police helicopter, coupled with
    Mr. Kerns’s own statements, justified their fear that a shooter might be hiding out
    in his home, perhaps even holding hostages. At the least, they insisted, these
    circumstances justified their brief incursion before they won consent from Ms.
    Zisser. And even if they did somehow violate the Fourth Amendment, the
    officers added, they did not violate clearly established Fourth Amendment law.
    See Aplt. App. 90-94. In his opposition to summary judgment, Mr. Kerns
    understood both prongs of the qualified immunity analysis to be in play and
    proceeded to explain his view that the officers violated his Fourth Amendment
    rights, id. at 151-56, as well as why our precedent clearly established that their
    conduct violated those rights, id. at 148-51. Though the dissent rightly notes the
    question is close, it ultimately accepts that both aspects of the qualified immunity
    test were placed in play by the parties before the district court.
    Despite this, however, the district court did not analyze the clearly
    established law element. Instead, the court held only that the defendants had
    actually violated Mr. Kerns’s Fourth Amendment rights, and from this holding it
    proceeded directly to the conclusion that they were not entitled to qualified
    - 14 -
    immunity. In other words, the district court’s opinion addressed only the first
    part of the two part test for qualified immunity.
    What to do when the district court fails to address the second, clearly
    established law, element? If it were clear that no constitutional violation took
    place, as the defendants urge, we might simply reverse the district court and grant
    qualified immunity. But the answer to that question isn’t so clear in this case.
    Faced with that problem we usually do well — as Pearson and Camreta remind
    us — to proceed directly to the clearly established law question when we’re sure
    it yields immunity anyway. But there again the answer isn’t so obvious in this
    case. So it is that we are left in a situation without obvious answers to either
    qualified immunity question and risk confronting difficult constitutional questions
    without the benefit of a full analysis from the district court.
    In these circumstances, there remains, however, another course available to
    us — remanding the matter back to the district court to finish the work of
    answering the second qualified immunity question. See Distiso v. Town of
    Wolcott, 352 F. App’x 478, 482 (2d Cir. 2009) (unpublished) (“When a district
    court gives only cursory treatment to the immunity defense, [we] will remand to
    the district court with instructions to give further consideration to the matter.”)
    (internal quotation omitted). That course bears the advantage of allowing the
    adversarial process to work through the problem and culminate in a considered
    district court decision, a decision that will minimize the risk of an improvident
    - 15 -
    governing appellate decision from this court. And that course is especially
    prudent where, as here, the issue is close and the briefing on appeal less than
    entirely satisfactory. Indeed, many of the same considerations that Pearson and
    Camreta identify as counseling in favor of proceeding directly to the second
    qualified immunity element — the possibility of avoiding a needless
    constitutional question, the quality of briefing, and the desire to avoid the risk of
    a poor decision — also counsel in favor of remanding to ensure the district court
    addresses the second element before we begin to tangle with a case on appeal.
    And it is for these very reasons that we reserve decision on both aspects of the
    qualified immunity question in this case until after the district court, on remand,
    has finished its work on the clearly established law prong.
    Our dissenting colleague proceeds to reach the questions we think prudent
    to defer, offering views on both prongs of the qualified immunity analysis. He
    does so in part because he reads the district court’s opinion as having already
    addressed the clearly established law question in two passages. We regret we are
    unable to agree. First, the dissent cites the background section of the district
    court’s order where it simply recites the familiar two prong qualified immunity
    test without applying it to this case. See Aplt. App. at 217. We don’t doubt the
    district court exhaustively recited the second qualified immunity question. The
    problem is the court didn’t proceed to answer it. Second, the dissent points to a
    single sentence in the district court’s self-described “analysis” section (a single
    - 16 -
    sentence out of a four page section). But that sentence says simply this: “The
    Kerns[es] have a Fourth Amendment expectation of privacy in their own home
    that is well-established. See Payton v. New York, 445 U.S. at 585.” See Aplt.
    App. at 220. By its own terms, that sentence doesn’t purport to issue any holding
    on the second qualified immunity question. It does not, for example, state that
    the officers violated the clearly established right it identified or explain how they
    did so.
    But even if the dissent’s reading were correct and the district court’s
    formulaic statement of a general legal proposition was intended as a holding on
    the clearly established law question, it is simply inadequate to that task. Of
    course, Mr. Kerns (like everyone else) has a well-established privacy interest in
    his home. But the Supreme Court and we have explained that, when it comes to
    deciding the second qualified immunity question, it is “not enough to look at,”
    and declare a law enforcement officer liable, based on such “generalized
    principles.” Medina v. City and County of Denver, 
    960 F.2d 1493
    , 1497-98 (10th
    Cir. 1992) (citing Anderson v. Creighton, 
    483 U.S. 635
    , 639-40 (1987)). The
    Supreme Court vigorously underscored the point recently, reminding us with
    some apparent exasperation that it has “repeatedly told courts . . . not to define
    clearly established law at a high level of generality. The general proposition, for
    example, that an unreasonable search or seizure violates the Fourth Amendment is
    of little help in determining whether the violative nature of particular conduct is
    - 17 -
    clearly established.” Ashcroft, 131 S. Ct. at 2084 (internal citations omitted).
    Instead, for any court to reach a determination that a violation of clearly
    established law has taken place a “more particularized” inquiry is required.
    Anderson, 
    483 U.S. at 640
    . The court must ask whether “every reasonable
    official would have understood that what he [did] violate[d] that right.” Ashcroft,
    
    131 S. Ct. at 2083
     (emphasis added) (quotation omitted). To satisfy this standard,
    “[w]e do not require a case directly on point,” but neither may a district court
    deny immunity unless “existing precedent [has] placed the statutory or
    constitutional question beyond debate.” 
    Id.
     (emphasis added).
    The relevant question the district court needed to address, thus, wasn’t
    whether we all have some general privacy interest in our homes (of course we
    do). It was instead whether it was beyond debate in 2005 that the officers’ entry
    and search lacked legal justification. In addressing this question the district court
    needed to address the officers’ claim that exigent circumstances existed (based on
    a belief that someone who had just shot down a police helicopter might be hiding
    in or near the home) and their claim that their intrusion was justified in part
    because of the consent Ms. Zisser supplied (at least after the incursion was first
    made). And these questions the district court simply left unanalyzed.
    III
    We turn next to the case against Sheriff White. Before the district court,
    Mr. Kerns argued that the Sheriff violated his clearly established Fourth and
    - 18 -
    Fourteenth Amendment rights by asking the VA hospital to share its records
    concerning Mr. Kerns’s treatment. To be exact, Mr. Kerns didn’t argue that he
    owned the hospital records. See Daniel J. Gilman & James C. Cooper, There is a
    Time to Keep Silent and a Time to Speak, the Hard Part is Knowing Which is
    Which: Striking the Balance Between Privacy Protection and the Flow of Health
    Care Information, 
    16 Mich. Telecomm. & Tech. L. Rev. 279
    , 309 (2010)
    (explaining that health care providers generally own patient records). Neither did
    he seek to hold anyone liable for violating state or federal statutes seeking to
    ensure some degree of privacy in patient records. See, e.g., Health Insurance
    Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA), Pub. L. 104-191, 
    110 Stat. 1936
    (1996). Instead, Mr. Kerns submitted only that, whoever owned the records and
    whatever other laws may say about how and when they might be shared with law
    enforcement, he had a constitutionally protected expectation that the hospital
    would keep its records shielded from the Sheriff absent a warrant.
    The district court analyzed both aspects of the qualified immunity test
    before agreeing. On appeal, the Sheriff disputes whether he violated Mr. Kerns’s
    constitutional rights by asking a hospital to share its records voluntarily — and, if
    he did, whether those rights were clearly established at the time. Because we
    agree with Sheriff White on the latter (clearly established law) question, we
    reverse without addressing the former (constitutional violation) question. And we
    pursue this course because doing so allows us to avoid rendering a decision on
    - 19 -
    important and contentious questions of constitutional law with the attendant
    needless (entirely avoidable) risk of reaching an improvident decision on these
    vital questions.
    We begin with Mr. Kerns’s Fourth Amendment claim, because it provides
    the more “explicit textual source of constitutional protection” against law
    enforcement searches. County of Sacramento v. Lewis, 
    523 U.S. 833
    , 842 (1998)
    (quotation omitted). At step two of the qualified immunity analysis, the question
    before us is whether Mr. Kerns can show that Sheriff White’s request to a third
    party (the hospital) for records that it may own but in which Mr. Kerns claims a
    privacy interest (an interest which we accept exists for our purposes at step two)
    violated clearly established Fourth Amendment law as of 2005.
    He cannot. In Douglas v. Dobbs, 
    419 F.3d 1097
     (10th Cir. 2005), this court
    accepted that a patient has a privacy interest in medical records held by a third
    party medical services provider. At the same time, however, the court proceeded
    to explain that statutes requiring disclosure of those records to “law enforcement”
    may not always violate the Fourth Amendment. 
    Id.
     at 1102 n.3. And then, in
    language directly pertinent here, the court added that the question whether, in the
    absence of such a statute, “a warrant is required [for law enforcement] to conduct
    an investigatory search of [medical] records [held by a third party] . . . is an issue
    that has not been settled.” 
    Id. at 1103
    . Given this court’s express recognition of
    the uncertain state of the law in 2005 regarding the very circumstances we now
    - 20 -
    face, we are hardly in a position to say that the proper resolution of the issue was
    simultaneously beyond doubt. See also Herring v. Keenan, 
    218 F.3d 1171
    , 1173
    (10th Cir. 2000) (recognizing “a constitutional right to privacy” in medical
    records but granting qualified immunity because no clearly established law put
    defendant on notice that his conduct violated that right).
    Complicating the Fourth Amendment analysis in this case is the role of
    third party doctrine. Under that doctrine, “the Fourth Amendment does not
    prohibit the obtaining of information revealed to a third party and conveyed by
    [the third party] to Government authorities, even if the information is revealed [to
    the third party] on the assumption that it will be used only for a limited purpose
    and the confidence placed in the third party will not be betrayed.” United States
    v. Miller, 
    425 U.S. 435
    , 443 (1976). The Supreme Court has already applied third
    party doctrine to financial information, holding that the government may seek
    without a warrant confidential information clients have entrusted to their banks
    for safe keeping. 
    Id.
     And at least some courts have indicated the same analysis
    applies to personal medical records entrusted by patients to hospitals or care
    providers — allowing law enforcement to seek without a warrant medical records
    held by third parties. See Wayne R. LaFave, Search and Seizure: A Treatise on
    the Fourth Amendment § 2.7(d) (4th ed. 2004) (collecting authority). While
    there’s certainly room to debate whether and how third party doctrine should
    apply to medical records, see, e.g., Poornima L. Ravishankar, Comment, Planned
    - 21 -
    Parenthood is Not a Bank: Closing the Clinic Doors to the Fourth Amendment
    Third Party Doctrine, 
    34 Seton Hall L. Rev. 1093
     (2004); United States v.
    Warshak, 
    631 F.3d 266
     (6th Cir. 2010) (declining to extend Miller to ISP
    records), and while we in no way prejudge these questions, the fact that a live
    (and heated) debate exists on them is more than enough to preclude us from
    saying that the Sheriff violated clearly established law when he sought records
    held by a third party care provider.
    In an effort to shoulder his burden of showing otherwise, Mr. Kerns
    depends principally on Ferguson v. City of Charleston, 
    532 U.S. 67
     (2001). But
    in that case the Supreme Court expressly declined to answer the question posed in
    this one. Ferguson held that state hospital employees conducted an unlawful
    search in violation of the Fourth Amendment by taking urine samples from
    pregnant mothers without their consent in order to test them for cocaine and
    provide the results to law enforcement for use against the patients. 
    Id. at 77
    , 84-
    85. In reaching its result, the Court took care to emphasize that the only search at
    issue was the taking and testing of urine for police use. See 
    id.
     at 78 n.13. The
    Court expressly left open whether disclosure of preexisting medical records held
    by the hospital would also be a search implicating the Fourth Amendment. 
    Id.
     at
    77 n.9. In fact, the Court even acknowledged that in some situations a patient
    might well “expect that members of the hospital staff might turn over evidence”
    without his or her consent. 
    Id.
     at 78 n.13. And after the Supreme Court
    - 22 -
    remanded the case to the Fourth Circuit, that court, too, held only that the
    hospital’s nonconsensual “taking and testing” of urine for law enforcement
    purposes was an unlawful search, and again expressly declined to decide “whether
    the disclosure of test results to law enforcement also implicate[s] the Fourth
    Amendment.” 
    308 F.3d 380
    , 395 (4th Cir. 2002). According to the terms of
    Ferguson itself, then, it hardly placed the Fourth Amendment question before us
    beyond debate. Underscoring our conclusion, Professor LaFave has explained
    that Ferguson cannot be taken as having “disapprov[ed] of the result in cases”
    applying third party doctrine to medical records and finding no Fourth
    Amendment violation where (as here) a law enforcement officer seeks medical
    records held by third party care givers. LaFave, Search and Seizure § 2.7(d). 2
    Turning to the Fourteenth Amendment, the same sort of problems recur. In
    Douglas, this court examined Fourteenth as well as Fourth Amendment case law
    before concluding that a warrantless request for third party-held records did not
    violate clearly established law as of 2005. 
    419 F.3d at 1101-03
    . And, again, we
    2
    Alternatively, Mr. Kerns directs us to a pair of Tenth Circuit cases in aid
    of his Fourth Amendment claim. First, he finds hope in Lankford v. City of
    Hobart, 
    27 F.3d 477
     (10th Cir. 1994), where this court said “it is possible” a
    Fourth Amendment violation had occurred under somewhat similar circumstances.
    
    Id.
     at 480 n.2. For its part, the dissent also relies extensively on Lankford. See
    Dissent at 19-21. But whatever else one wants to say about that decision, its
    language hardly announced “clearly established law.” At best, Lankford’s
    equivocation declined to foreclose the possibility of a Fourth Amendment
    violation. Likewise, we reject Mr. Kerns’s suggestion that the out-of-circuit
    concurrence in United States v. Abrams, 
    615 F.2d 541
     (1st Cir. 1980), clearly
    established that Sheriff White’s conduct was unlawful.
    - 23 -
    are hardly able to say otherwise now. It is also unclear whether and to what
    degree the Fourth Amendment’s third party doctrine might — or might not — also
    inform the parameters of a patient’s Fourteenth Amendment’s privacy interest in
    third party medical records. See, e.g., Lewis, 
    523 U.S. at 841
     (noting that the
    Supreme Court is “reluctant to expand the concept of substantive due process . . .
    where a particular Amendment [like the Fourth already] provides an explicit
    textual source of constitutional protection”) (quotation omitted).
    Confirming the lack of a clear answer here, most of the Fourteenth
    Amendment cases Mr. Kerns cites involve state actors who publicly disclosed a
    citizen’s private information, not law enforcement officers who requested the
    voluntary production of records held by a third party for use in legitimate law
    enforcement efforts.3 And the Supreme Court in Whalen v. Roe, 
    429 U.S. 589
    (1977), a case which Mr. Kerns seeks to rely upon, suggested a meaningful
    constitutional difference may exist between these situations, indicating that access
    by the government without a concomitant public disclosure “does not
    automatically amount to an impermissible invasion of privacy.” 
    Id. at 600, 602
    .
    3
    See, e.g., A.L.A. v. West Valley City, 
    26 F.3d 989
    , 990 (10th Cir. 1994)
    (considering claims arising from “disclosure of [] confidential medical
    information”) (emphasis added); Stidham v. Peace Officer Standards & Training,
    
    265 F.3d 1144
    , 1155 (10th Cir. 2001) (“interest in avoiding disclosure of personal
    matters”) (emphasis added) (quotation omitted); Flanagan v. Munger, 
    890 F.2d 1557
    , 1570 (10th Cir. 1989) (“[T]he constitutional right to privacy protects an
    individual’s interest in preventing disclosure by the government of personal
    matters.”) (emphasis added); Mangels v. Pena, 
    789 F.2d 836
    , 839 (10th Cir.
    1986).
    - 24 -
    Repeating the point last term, the Supreme Court revisited Whalen and held that
    the government’s mere collection of information didn’t violate an assumed
    privacy interest when the information was sufficiently protected against public
    disclosure. See NASA v. Nelson, 
    131 S. Ct. 746
    , 761-62 (2011).
    To be sure, Mr. Kerns cites two cases in which this court held that
    government officials violated plaintiffs’ substantive due process privacy rights by
    accessing their records without public disclosure. But both of those cases
    involved another element not present here: the government officials involved
    accessed the plaintiffs’ confidential information as part of an unlawful campaign
    of sexual harassment.4 Obviously, that situation isn’t present here; there is no
    dispute that Sheriff White was pursuing what was an otherwise lawful
    investigation. Neither is this point of distinction clearly immaterial. The cases
    on which Mr. Kerns relies are consistent with the logic of the common law
    privacy torts — accessing confidential medical information for the purpose of
    sexual harassment is exactly the sort of “highly offensive” conduct that might
    give rise to the tort of intrusion upon seclusion. See Restatement (Second) of
    Torts § 652B (1977). Meanwhile, it’s less than clear that an officer’s requesting a
    4
    See Lankford, 
    27 F.3d at 478
    ; Eastwood v. Dep’t of Corr., 
    846 F.2d 627
    ,
    629-30 (10th Cir. 1988). These cases are explicitly directed at “protecting
    employees’ private information from being obtained by their employers without a
    valid reason.” See Lankford, 
    27 F.3d at 479
     (emphasis added); Eastwood, 
    846 F.2d at 631
     (10th Cir. 1988) (the Fourteenth Amendment “protects the individual
    from governmental inquiry into matters in which it does not have a legitimate and
    proper interest”).
    - 25 -
    suspect’s medical records for legitimate law enforcement purposes would meet
    this same standard. Cf. Setzer v. Farmers Ins. Co., Inc., 185 F. App’x. 748, 755
    (10th Cir. 2006) (unpublished) (insurance company’s conduct was not “highly
    offensive to a reasonable person” when the company made a general request for
    medical records with consent for a disclosure of only limited information). Our
    cases simply don’t speak to that question, let alone do so clearly.
    Of course, a case on point isn’t required if the impropriety of the
    defendant’s challenged conduct is clear from existing case law. If we could be
    sure that the distinction between public disclosure or government access without a
    valid purpose, on the one hand, and more limited government access for otherwise
    legitimate purposes, on the other, is a trivial one we would rule in Mr. Kerns’s
    favor. See Hope v. Pelzer, 
    536 U.S. 730
    , 741 (2002) (“general statements of the
    law are not inherently incapable” of satisfying the second prong of the qualified
    immunity test) (quotation omitted). The difficulty is that the Supreme Court in
    Whalen and NASA and the logic of our own cases preclude such a conclusion and
    acknowledge instead that such a distinction might make a constitutional
    difference.
    The dissent eloquently argues that if the scope of Mr. Kerns’s Fourth and
    Fourteenth Amendments rights in third party held medical records isn’t clear
    enough then we should use this case to address the matter definitively. But to
    voice this argument is to confirm that the issue we confront today hasn’t yet been
    - 26 -
    clearly resolved — and why qualified immunity is unavoidable. The Supreme
    Court has warned us that small qualified immunity appeals are rarely the right
    place to decide large new issues of constitutional law. We always do well to
    abide its warnings. And perhaps especially so here, where the Fourth and
    Fourteenth Amendment questions surrounding medical records are complex, the
    third party overlay adds another dimension to the problem, the parties’ briefing
    unhelpfully skates past many of the important issues, and the lack of clearly
    established law is readily apparent from our case law and that of the Supreme
    Court. So it is we leave the bigger questions for another day and today rest our
    decision on a much humbler premise, reversing the district court’s entry of
    summary judgment against Sheriff White and ordering the entry of summary
    judgment in his favor only because Mr. Kerns has failed to identify clearly
    established law rendering beyond debate that the Sheriff’s conduct was unlawful
    as of 2005. 5
    IV
    Finally we turn to Mr. Kerns’s false arrest, false imprisonment, and
    malicious prosecution claims against Deputy Lindley, Deputy Koren, and Mr.
    Haag. Although these torts require Mr. Kerns to prove a variety of different
    5
    Neither do we doubt that the scope of the Constitution’s protection for a
    patient’s hospital records can be adequately decided in future cases where the
    qualified immunity overlay isn’t in play (e.g., through motions to suppress
    wrongly seized records or claims for injunctive or declaratory relief).
    - 27 -
    elements, and although defendants pursue various qualified immunity arguments
    in their respective appeals, there is at least one piece of common ground. To
    prove any of his claims, Mr. Kerns acknowledges he must establish that his arrest
    and detention were without probable cause. And, in the defendants’ view, this he
    cannot do because whatever mistakes, omissions, or misstatements they may have
    made in connection with the arrest warrant affidavit or in grand jury proceedings,
    there was still probable cause to arrest and detain him during the period of his
    prosecution. With this much we agree, and we proceed to uphold the defendants’
    claim of qualified immunity on this basis because doing so turns out to be the
    easiest and most economical way to resolve their various appeals. See Pearson,
    
    555 U.S. at 236
     (“[T]here are cases in which there would be little if any
    conservation of judicial resources to be had by beginning and ending with a
    discussion of the ‘clearly established’ prong.”).
    Procedurally we approach the probable cause question this way. Where
    false statements are alleged to have been included in an arrest warrant affidavit or
    grand jury testimony, “probable cause is determined by setting aside the false
    information and reviewing the remaining” truthful facts. Wolford v. Lasater, 
    78 F.3d 484
    , 489 (10th Cir. 1996). Similarly, where true information has been
    allegedly and unlawfully omitted from an affidavit or grand jury proceeding, the
    existence of probable cause is determined “by examining the affidavit [or
    proceedings] as if the omitted information had been included and inquiring if the
    - 28 -
    affidavit [or proceedings] would still have given rise to probable cause.” 
    Id.
    (internal quotation omitted); see also Taylor v. Meacham, 
    82 F.3d 1556
    , 1562
    (10th Cir. 1996).
    Substantively, the question whether probable cause existed in light of the
    — so defined — factual record does not require proof beyond reasonable doubt.
    It does not even require the suspect’s guilt to be “more likely true than false.”
    Texas v. Brown, 
    460 U.S. 730
    , 742 (1983); see also United States v. Ludwig, 
    641 F.3d 1243
    , 1252 (10th Cir. 2011). Instead, the relevant question is whether a
    “substantial probability” existed that the suspect committed the crime, Taylor, 
    82 F.3d at 1562
    , requiring something “more than a bare suspicion.” Ludwig, 
    641 F.3d at 1252
     (quoting United States v. Garcia, 
    179 F.3d 265
    , 269 (5th Cir. 1999)).
    Evaluated using this technique — striking the allegedly false information
    and inserting the allegedly truthful but omitted information — and in light of this
    substantive standard — requiring more than a bare suspicion but not proof beyond
    a reasonable doubt or even a preponderance — the affidavit and grand jury
    testimony still featured sufficient evidence to warrant Mr. Kerns’s arrest and
    detention.
    We begin with what was included in the affidavit and isn’t challenged by
    Mr. Kerns before this court. Mr. Kerns admitted to police that he was looking at
    the helicopter and “annoyed by it” at the time it was shot. He was trained both as
    a military marksmanship instructor and as a helicopter mechanic. He bragged to
    - 29 -
    police that the helicopter made “a great target,” that he could have “made that
    shot,” and that the helicopter’s strobe lights had given him an indication of the
    helicopter’s flight path. Mr. Kerns behaved suspiciously from the night of the
    shooting straight through to his arrest. At one point he led detectives on a high
    speed car chase. (It is true that the police were in an unmarked vehicle and Mr.
    Kerns admitted only after his arrest that he suspected the car belonged to the
    police all along, but the police (understandably) thought the behavior suspicious
    at the time it occurred.) At other points he gave questionable statements to police
    — no one else reported hearing a gunshot near his house, and police never found
    the rocks Mr. Kerns said he heard kicking up next to him. And even granting, as
    Mr. Kerns contends, that Mr. Haag should have excluded the FN rifle and with it
    the spent shell casing in the trash as the one responsible for downing the
    helicopter, it is uncontroverted that the tape concealing the casing was fresh and
    new — again suggesting that Mr. Kerns was attempting to hide something
    peculiar.
    All this taken together was enough to give police substantial if not
    incontrovertible reason to believe that Mr. Kerns was responsible for the
    shooting. Indeed, other courts have found probable cause in circumstances
    analogous in various ways to those presented by this case. See, e.g., United
    States v. Mills, 
    280 F.3d 915
    , 921 (9th Cir. 2002) (defendant’s dubious statements
    about presence near remote crime scene and officer’s knowledge of defendant’s
    - 30 -
    criminal history sufficient for probable cause to arrest); Tom v. Voida, 
    963 F.2d 952
    , 958-59 (7th Cir. 1992) (discussing flight as a “relevant and probative factor”
    in probable cause analysis and holding that flight from an officer “may certainly
    provide information to ripen an officer’s preexisting suspicions into probable
    cause”); Husbands ex rel. Forde v. City of New York, 335 F. App’x 124, 127 (2d
    Cir. 2009) (unpublished) (probable cause to arrest for shooting where officer
    heard shots suddenly fired, saw individual standing alone in the direction where
    the shots were fired, individual immediately turned around and proceeded in the
    direction from which the shots had come); Young v. Renico, 346 F. App’x 53, 58-
    59 (6th Cir. 2009) (unpublished) (probable cause to detain defendant suspected
    for murder of his wife and son where police had information suggesting
    defendant’s motive and defendant had told doctors to immediately remove his son
    from life support after learning of his condition); see also Johnson v.
    Schneiderheinz, 
    102 F.3d 340
    , 341-42 (8th Cir. 1996) (evidence that suspect was
    in vicinity of the murder and had lied to police about other details created at least
    “arguable” probable cause to arrest). Neither does Mr. Kerns identify any
    contrary authority that would lead us to reject a finding of probable cause in light
    of all the appropriately included facts.
    Instead, Mr. Kerns asks us to focus on facts that the affidavit and grand
    jury testimony omitted, insisting that including those facts would have ruled him
    - 31 -
    out as the shooter — even in light of the facts the affidavit properly contained.
    And this, he says, is the case for two reasons.
    First, he argues (as does the dissent) that if the defendants had disclosed the
    true location and heading of the helicopter it would have been clear that the shot
    couldn’t have come from his backyard. But none of this is necessarily
    exculpatory. It only does Mr. Kerns any good if he can show he was in his
    backyard at the time of the shooting. But the only evidence of that comes from
    Mr. Kerns’s self-interested statements. And by the time of his arrest Mr. Kerns
    had already proved himself unreliable through a variety of misleading and
    contradictory statements and actions — statements and actions outlined in the
    arrest warrant affidavit and grand jury testimony. Including the omitted
    information about the track of the helicopter, thus, would have done nothing to
    negate the probable cause that already existed.
    Second, Mr. Kerns says that, if Mr. Haag had followed the standards of his
    profession, he would have excluded the FN rifle as the one that shot down the
    helicopter — and the inclusion of this fact in the arrest warrant affidavit or grand
    jury proceedings would have negated probable cause to support his arrest and
    detention. But the difficulty with this line of argument is that nothing in the
    probable cause analysis we have set forth or the precedents we have discussed
    depends on the discovery of the weapon responsible for the crime. Even if the
    police had said that the FN rifle wasn’t involved in the shooting, sufficient other
    - 32 -
    evidence existed to provide probable cause to think Mr. Kerns was the shooter,
    including Mr. Kerns’s boasting about being able to hit the helicopter, his
    background, his many questionable statements, and his evasion of police. Each of
    these facts was known to the officers and does not require any speculation on
    their behalf. Indeed, probable cause to arrest often arises from circumstantial
    evidence when the weapon responsible for the crime cannot be found or
    identified, as the precedents cited above illustrate and confirm.
    The existence of probable cause disposes of all of Mr. Kerns’s claims
    against all three defendants. For its part, the dissent disagrees with us about the
    existence of probable cause, but it doesn’t grapple with the authority we’ve cited
    or offer any of its own. And it proceeds to deny qualified immunity to all three
    defendants without pausing to address the clearly established law question. To be
    sure, the dissent appears very concerned by the fact that Mr. Haag’s ballistic
    analysis and Officer Koren’s trajectory analysis seem to have been faulty and
    perhaps even recklessly so. And, to be equally clear, we share that concern. Of
    course and emphatically, when assessing the existence of probable cause we must
    exclude such false or reckless information and include any suppressed material
    exculpatory information. But we have done exactly that and the fact remains, at
    the end of the process, enough truthful information existed in the arrest warrant
    - 33 -
    and grand jury proceedings to establish probable cause. And because of that we
    remain obliged by law to extend qualified immunity. 6
    ***
    The district court’s order denying qualified immunity with respect to Mr.
    Kerns’s Fourth Amendment claim against Officers Bader, Thompson, and Carter,
    is vacated and that matter is remanded for further proceedings consistent with the
    guidance provided above. The district court’s order denying qualified immunity
    with respect Mr. Kerns’s claims against Sheriff White, Deputy Lindley, Deputy
    Koren, and Mr. Haag, is reversed and the court is directed to grant dismissal to
    these defendants on the basis of qualified immunity. We have no occasion to
    reach the defendants’ other arguments as to why they should be entitled to
    absolute or qualified immunity. Similarly, Deputy Lindley’s and Deputy Koren’s
    argument that the district court ruled on their summary judgment motion
    prematurely is mooted by our reversal in their favor.
    6
    Mr. Kerns (but not the dissent) suggests that the U.S. Attorney’s decision
    to drop criminal charges against him after Mr. Haag admitted error proves that
    probable cause depended on Mr. Haag’s testimony. But this conflates two
    logically different questions. A prosecutor’s decision not to proceed to trial
    where proof beyond a reasonable doubt is required does not necessarily prove that
    a prior indictment lacked probable cause. Separately, Mr. Kerns notes that
    Deputy Lindley’s affidavit overstated the certainty that the recovered bullet
    fragments were consistent with ammunition found in Mr. Kerns’s house. But he
    doesn’t argue that this statement was actually false, and the link between Mr.
    Kerns’s ammunition stash and the bullet fragments is, again, unnecessary to
    establish probable cause.
    - 34 -
    Nos. 09-2273, 10-2103, & 10-2106, Kerns v. Bader
    HOLLOWAY, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
    I am unable to join the majority’s holdings and so must respectfully dissent.
    I agree with the majority that we have jurisdiction to review the legal issues in
    these appeals.
    I. Appeal No. 09-2273
    A
    In this, the first of these related appeals, the Appellants are Officers Bader,
    Thompson, and Carter (the Officers), three Albuquerque police officers. The
    claims against these Officers were brought by Jason Kerns and his parents, Archie
    Kerns and Mary Ann Kerns (Plaintiffs). Plaintiffs sought damages against the
    Officers under 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
     for violation of their Fourth Amendment right to
    be free of unreasonable searches. This claim arose from the Officers’ entry in the
    Plaintiffs’ residence on the night of the helicopter crash.
    I would affirm the district court’s denial of the Officers’ motion for
    summary judgment sought on grounds of qualified immunity. The district court
    held that a jury could find that there was no imminent threat that would justify the
    Officers’ entry into the Plaintiffs’ home. The Officers’ only argument on appeal
    is that there were exigent circumstances, which under established law would have
    justified their intrusion into the home.
    Because our review is limited to questions of law, it is not necessary to
    enlarge on the majority’s summary of the facts, even though the majority seems to
    have strayed at times from viewing the facts in the light most favorable to
    Plaintiffs as we are constrained to do in the posture of this appeal.1 It is sufficient
    to note that the district court held that the jury would have to decide if a
    reasonable officer would have perceived that an imminent danger existed that
    would justify the entry. We do not have jurisdiction to review that holding in this
    interlocutory appeal. See Johnson v. Jones, 
    515 U.S. 304
    , 313 (1995).
    The Officers do attempt to frame their argument as a legal issue. They
    contend that the district court erred in its application of the legal standards
    enunciated in United States v. Najar, 
    451 F.3d 710
     (10th Cir. 2006). But in fact
    their argument rests on rejection of the district court’s holding that the jury must
    decide questions of fact pertaining to whether a reasonable officer would have
    perceived an immediate need to protect himself or others under the circumstances.
    And as noted, that holding is not reviewable in this interlocutory appeal.
    The Officers do not contend that their entry into the home was justified on
    any other basis. Therefore, if exigent circumstances did not exist, the Plaintiffs’
    Fourth Amendment rights were violated by the Officers’ entry into their home. I
    thus do not understand the majority’s assertion that there is no easy answer to
    either of the two questions involved in the qualified immunity analysis. On the
    1
    The existence vel non of exigent circumstances is a mixed question of fact
    and law. See United States v. Anderson, 
    981 F.2d 1560
    , 1567 (10th Cir. 1992).
    The ultimate question whether the facts as found by the jury meet the legal
    standard of exigency is a question of law. 
    Id.
    -2-
    facts as we must take them, i.e., that Plaintiffs produced sufficient evidence in the
    district court to support a possible jury finding in their favor on the underlying
    factual questions, the answer to the first question surely is easy: An entry into the
    home is unlawful when there is neither a warrant nor probable cause and when the
    purported exigency is not one that would cause a reasonable officer to believe that
    someone inside the home was either an imminent threat to others or was herself in
    imminent danger.
    B
    I disagree with the majority’s assertion that the district judge did not
    address the second prong of the qualified immunity analysis (the clearly
    established right prong). First, I note that the Officers made only the slightest
    gesture towards raising the issue concerning a clearly established right in the
    district court. Indeed, to show that the issue was raised, the majority is only able
    to point to a single sentence in a sub-heading of the Officers’ summary judgment
    briefing. There, the Officers made only a conclusory assertion that the Plaintiffs
    had not shown the violation of a clearly established right.2 I am willing to agree
    that this was sufficient to raise the issue. But I highlight this point to underscore
    that the district court’s concise treatment of the issue is completely unsurprising
    in light of the Officers’ failure to make any reasoned argument on the issue.
    2
    The primary focus of the Officers’ argument both in the district court and
    on appeal is that their conduct was lawful under the recognized exigent
    circumstances exception to the Fourth Amendment.
    -3-
    In spite of the fact that the Officers had merely referred to a general
    principle rather than making a reasoned argument, the district judge nevertheless
    prefaced his analysis with a thorough discussion of the applicable law. First, the
    judge assessed what is meant by a clearly established right, Aplt. App. 217, and
    then moved on to discuss the law to be applied to Plaintiffs’ claims in this case.
    After quoting the Fourth Amendment, the judge noted the applicable principles of
    Fourth Amendment law: For a search without a warrant to be valid, it must fall
    within a recognized exception to the warrant requirement; searches within the
    home without a warrant “are presumptively unreasonable”;3 the home is entitled
    to the greatest protection under the Fourth Amendment;4 and the government
    bears the burden of proving that the exigency exception to the warrant
    requirement applies, a burden which is “especially heavy when the exception
    must justify the warrantless entry of a home.”5 As the district judge then
    proceeded to apply the Fourth Amendment principles to the evidence submitted
    by the parties, he prefaced that analysis with the assertion that the Plaintiffs “have
    a Fourth Amendment expectation of privacy in their own home that is well-
    established.” Aplt. App. at 220. Each of these statements of the governing legal
    principles is beyond dispute, of course.
    3
    Payton v. New York, 
    445 U.S. 573
    , 586 (1980).
    4
    Kyllo v. United States, 
    533 U.S. 27
    , 31 (2001).
    5
    United States v. Najar, 
    451 F.3d 710
    , 717 (10th Cir. 2006).
    -4-
    The district court merely held that, depending on what facts are found by
    the jury, the Officers may have entered the Plaintiffs’ home when no reasonable
    officer would have perceived any imminent danger to anyone. Such an entry
    would violate the clearly established law that the district judge had surveyed.
    I disagree with the majority’s view that the district judge’s analysis was
    inadequate because it was based only on generalized principles. Some cases do
    indeed require a more particularized inquiry. This is not one of them. As
    discussed more fully in Part II-B of this dissent, “general statements of the law
    are not inherently incapable of giving fair and clear warning . . . .” Hope v.
    Pelzer, 
    536 U.S. 730
    , 741 (2002).
    Thus the majority is incorrect to say that the district judge did not address
    the second prong of the qualified immunity analysis. The question is not a
    difficult one in my view, and so I disagree with the majority’s decision to remand
    the matter to the district court to rule again on this strictly legal question. The
    Officers had neither a warrant nor probable cause. If the circumstances they
    encountered did not support a reasonable belief that danger to someone was
    imminent, then the armed, nighttime entry into the home violated clearly
    established Fourth Amendment law. The district judge’s ruling denying summary
    judgment for the Officers should be affirmed.
    Even if I were otherwise in agreement with the majority in this first of
    these appeals, I would still disagree with its formulation of the issue to be
    -5-
    addressed by the district court on remand. Maj. op. at 18. The majority states the
    issue with a myopic focus on the facts of this case, apparently inviting the district
    court to indulge in, rather than avoid, a “scavenger hunt for prior cases with
    precisely the same facts.”6 Moreover, the majority’s statement of the issue it
    would have the district court address suffers from other flaws. The majority’s
    reference to the Officers’ “belief” that exigent circumstances existed should not
    deter the district court on remand from correctly focusing on whether a reasonable
    officer would have believed that exigent circumstances existed (an issue which, as
    I have said, must in this case be resolved by the jury).
    The majority’s assertion that the district court must consider the Officers’
    “claim that their intrusion was justified in part because of the consent Ms. Zisser
    supplied (at least after the incursion was first made)” is surprising because the
    Officers have not made this contention on appeal. More importantly, the
    majority’s instruction to the district court that it should consider this is very
    problematic because the issue appears to be one that the district court on remand
    in the summary judgment stage must resolve against the Officers. Ms. Zisser
    testified that she was unaware of the Officers until they had already crossed the
    threshold. Obviously being unaware of their entry, she did not consent to it.
    Encountering armed officers inside the home in the middle of the night, Ms.
    Zisser did not tell them to leave immediately. The district court noted that Ms.
    6
    Pierce v. Gilchrist, 
    359 F.3d 1279
    , 1298 (10th Cir. 2004).
    -6-
    Zisser had stated (presumably in her deposition) that “she did not feel she could
    deny the officers’ request [to look around inside the house], as they had their
    weapons displayed.” Aplt. App. at 213-14. Barring a concession by the Plaintiffs
    that Ms. Zisser’s consent was voluntarily given, which seems most unlikely given
    her testimony, I believe that in its reconsideration of the Officers’ motion for
    summary judgment, the district court must regard the Officers’ continued
    presence in the home as being without consent.
    II. Appeal No. 10-2103
    This appeal is brought by Sheriff White, Deputy Lindley and Deputy
    Koren. The claims against White, Lindley, and Koren were brought only by Jason
    Kerns. The issues raised by Sheriff White are, however, quite distinct from those
    raised by Deputies Lindley and Koren. The issues raised by the latter two are in
    fact related to the issues raised in the third of these three related appeals and
    accordingly will be addressed in Part III of this dissent.
    A
    I must respectfully dissent from the majority’s decision to reverse the
    district court’s proper denial of Sheriff White’s motion for summary judgment
    sought on qualified immunity grounds. The claim against Sheriff White is based
    on the Sheriff’s role in acquiring Jason Kerns’s medical records from the
    -7-
    Veterans Administration.7 Because I would affirm the district court’s ruling
    denying Sheriff White’s motion for summary judgment, I would necessarily
    address both prongs of the qualified immunity defense.
    Jason Kerns served in our military. Like far too many others, he apparently
    came home from his service only to experience difficulties adjusting to civilian
    life. Without examining the confidential medical records that are the subject of
    his claim against Sheriff White, we do not know what caused him to seek
    psychiatric treatment at his local Veterans Administration Hospital, nor do we
    know more than that he was diagnosed as suffering from post-traumatic stress
    disorder. We do know, or in any event his attorney tells us and our precedents
    require us to assume, that his treatment involved disclosure to his caregivers of
    intimate details of his personal life.
    In the course of investigating the crash of the Albuquerque police
    helicopter, Sheriff White apparently learned that Jason Kerns had told an officer
    that he had post-traumatic stress disorder. Sheriff White thus thought it possible
    that Kerns’s mere possession of firearms might be illegal, owing to the fact that
    Mr. Kerns’s voluntary treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder suggested the
    7
    References in this dissent to “Jason Kerns’s records” are made merely for
    convenience, not to address the irrelevant question of whose property interests are
    involved. This case is not about title to personal property but about the
    constitutionally privileged information contained in the records. Thus, I use the
    phrase “Jason Kerns’s records” as an abbreviated reference to the protected
    information contained in those records.
    -8-
    possibility, although not the likelihood, that he had been committed to a mental
    institution or adjudicated a mental defective.8 Acting on this possibility, 9 Sheriff
    White requested from the VA hospital, by letter, “any and all records” relevant to
    Mr. Kerns’s “psychiatric condition as it would apply to 18 U.S.C. [§] 922(g)(4).”
    And for some reason the Sheriff decided to seek information from the VA rather
    than from the courts, where public record of any such adjudication or involuntary
    commitment would have been found (as any competent law enforcement officer
    undoubtedly would have known).10 In response to his letter, the Sheriff’s deputy
    received Jason’s entire medical file from the VA. Every intimate detail that Jason
    had reported to his caregivers under a presumption of confidentiality was relayed
    to the Sheriff’s deputy for his perusal. 11
    8
    This part of the investigation clearly was not directly relevant to the
    helicopter crash under investigation. Instead, it was an effort to determine
    whether a different offense had been committed. While I do not question that
    such an inquiry is legitimate police work, if properly undertaken, in the context of
    a warrantless search it is relevant to the constitutional analysis whether law
    enforcement’s need for the information was urgent.
    9
    Sheriff White argued unsuccessfully in the district court that his quest for
    Jason’s medical records was supported by probable cause. On appeal, he does not
    repeat that argument, nor does he even assert that the quest was supported by
    reasonable suspicion. I conclude therefore that at this stage of the litigation, we
    must assume that the quest was based on nothing more than speculation.
    10
    The VA records yielded no indication that either had occurred.
    11
    A presumption of confidentiality was reasonable and in accord with
    traditional professional restrictions. A modern version of the ancient Hippocratic
    Oath states the physician’s duty of confidentiality in these terms: “I will respect
    (continued...)
    -9-
    Sheriff White undertook to obtain all of Jason’s records,12 in spite of their
    privileged nature, without consent, without a warrant or any other judicial
    process, in the complete absence of exigent circumstances, and without probable
    cause; his request was based only on his suspicion that a crime might have been
    committed.13 If constitutional privacy protections mean anything at all, this
    conduct violated Plaintiff’s right of privacy. As discussed infra, I believe that
    this is so obvious and so solidly grounded in existing law that a reasonable public
    official should have known that this intrusion into the Plaintiff’s privacy was
    unlawful. Because the violation of Mr. Kerns’s constitutional rights must be
    discussed in that context, I will forgo further elaboration of my views on that
    point and turn to the majority’s decision to avoid deciding whether a
    constitutional violation occurred here.
    I strongly believe that the majority’s decision to avoid the question whether
    the Plaintiff’s rights were violated is unwise. In Pearson v. Callahan, 
    555 U.S. 223
     (2009), the Court held that lower federal courts have the discretion to address
    11
    (...continued)
    the privacy of my patients, for their problems are not disclosed to me that the
    world may know.” Peter Tyson, The Hippocratic Oath Today, Public
    Broadcasting Service,
    http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/body/hippocratic-oath-today.html (March 27,
    2001).
    12
    The Sheriff’s letter requested the VA to produce “any and all records”
    relevant to Jason Kerns’s psychiatric condition. (Emphasis added.)
    13
    See n.9, supra.
    -10-
    only the second or “clearly established right” prong of the qualified immunity
    analysis, abrogating its holding in Saucier v. Katz, 
    533 U.S. 194
     (2001).
    Nevertheless, even as the Court removed the requirement for the lower courts to
    address first whether a constitutional violation had occurred, the Court went on to
    explain that there remain sound reasons for addressing the first prong in many
    cases. Pearson, 
    555 U.S. at 236
    . This is such a case.
    As the Court noted more recently, “our regular policy of avoidance
    sometimes does not fit the qualified immunity situation because it threatens to
    leave standards of official conduct permanently in limbo.” Camreta v. Greene,
    
    131 S. Ct. 2020
    , 2031 (2011). Dismissing cases on the second prong of the
    qualified immunity analysis “thus may frustrate the development of constitutional
    precedent and the promotion of law-abiding behavior.” 
    Id.
     (internal quotation
    marks omitted). The Court also cautioned there that lower courts should avoid
    turning small cases into large ones, as the majority notes in discussing the first of
    these three appeals. But this case does not present that danger because the answer
    to the first question is so patent.
    On the other hand, however, the majority insists that this is a contentious,
    complicated question. The obvious implication is that the Sheriff’s conduct here
    might have been lawful. In other words, even though the majority is willing to
    “accept for our purposes at step two” that Jason Kerns has a protected privacy
    -11-
    interest in the very personal information contained in his medical records, 14 that
    protection may mean nothing in the face of a request from law enforcement for
    access to that very personal information. That implication should be closely
    scrutinized.
    Suppose that Sheriff White had decided to investigate the legality of Jason
    Kerns’s gun ownership by checking court records. This would have been a
    logical thing to do, of course, since the question was whether Jason Kerns had
    been adjudicated a mentally defective or involuntarily committed, i.e., committed
    by court order, to an institution for psychiatric care. If the Sheriff had elected to
    pursue that course, he could have expected to encounter no obstacles, for court
    records are publicly available. He would not have needed a warrant, nor would
    he have needed to show Jason Kerns’s consent to his request for the information.
    There would have been no need for him to have shown probable cause or even
    reasonable suspicion.
    In saying that the question whether a constitutional violation occurred is a
    complicated, difficult one that ought to be avoided in the actual circumstances
    presented here, the majority implicitly suggests that the law may treat Sheriff
    14
    Maj. op. at 20. The majority seems almost reluctant to accept that Mr.
    Kerns has a privacy right. This is odd because this is a principle that several of
    our cases have recognized, see, e.g., A.L.A. v. West Valley City, 
    26 F.3d 989
    , 990-
    91 (10th Cir. 1994) (“There is no dispute that confidential medical information is
    entitled to constitutional privacy protection.”), and is not contested by the Sheriff
    in this litigation.
    -12-
    White’s acquisition of constitutionally protected, highly personal information the
    same way it would have treated his acquisition of information that may be readily
    obtained by the general public. In other words, information that has long been
    held to be protected by the Constitution may in fact not be protected at all but
    may be as readily available to law enforcement as public records are.
    I cannot accede to that view. The question we face in the first prong of the
    qualified immunity analysis is not a complicated one but a very simple one.
    Because the Sheriff’s conduct was so blithely oblivious to the constitutional and
    statutory protections afforded to the information he sought, we need not consider
    whether probable cause would have justified his acting without a warrant, or
    whether the Sheriff would have needed probable cause plus exigent circumstances
    for justification, to cite but one example of circumstances that could make this
    case less clear. This case is crystal clear. Against the protections afforded by the
    Constitution, the Sheriff can rely only on the fact that he had no improper motive.
    If this was not a constitutional violation, then intimate personal information
    contained in medical records is not protected by the Constitution and our
    precedents to the contrary are meaningless.
    The majority concludes that one statement from one very different case is
    dispositive here. In Douglas v. Dobbs, 
    419 F.3d 1097
     (10th Cir. 2005), we
    considered whether an assistant district attorney and her supervisor were entitled
    to qualified immunity for their role in advising law enforcement in the
    -13-
    preparation of a “motion and order” to produce the plaintiff’s pharmaceutical
    records. In the course of determining that the attorneys were entitled to qualified
    immunity at the second step of the analysis, our court observed – in what appears
    to be nothing more than obiter dictum – that it had not been settled whether a
    warrant was required to obtain the records. 
    Id. at 1103
    . 15
    The majority is plainly wrong to say that this dictum addresses “the” issue
    presented in the instant case and that the dictum concerns “the very circumstances
    we now face . . . .” Maj. op. at 20.16 First, the dictum addresses pharmaceutical
    records, not psychiatric records, and it is the latter that have been the subject of
    our prior cases. Further, as I have already said, the instant case requires us to
    consider whether privileged medical information can be obtained by law
    enforcement without a warrant or any other justification other than a suspicion
    that perhaps a crime may have been committed. It may be unclear whether a
    warrant is required. But the possibility that Sheriff White’s conduct could have
    been justified on some basis other than the existence of a proper search warrant –
    for example by probable cause plus exigent circumstances – has but minimal
    15
    In Douglas, law enforcement had acted on information that the plaintiff’s
    physician suspected plaintiff was forging prescriptions. Moreover, we noted that
    law enforcement was acting under the authority of a state statute. 
    Id. at 1102, n.3
    .
    16
    Given that Douglas twice cites a state statute that appears to authorize the
    conduct of law enforcement there, I do not understand the majority’s description
    of the dictum as addressing the necessity vel non of a warrant “in the absence of
    such a statute . . . .”
    -14-
    relevance to our inquiry here because of the extremely thin justification for the
    Sheriff’s conduct here.
    The majority says that the question whether a constitutional violation
    occurred here is further complicated by the “role of third[-]party doctrine.” Maj.
    op. at 21. I do not think that the there is any complication here. Our cases on the
    constitutional protection afforded to intimate personal information contained in
    medical records, discussed more in Part II-B, infra, afford no role to third-party
    doctrine, nor have we recognized in those cases that United States v. Miller, 
    425 U.S. 435
     (1976), a case regarding bank records, has any relevance.
    One case cited by the majority is of more immediate interest, however,
    because it provides a useful comparison. In United States v. Warshak, 
    631 F.3d 266
     (6th Cir. 2010), the court addressed the good-faith exception to the warrant
    requirement of the Fourth Amendment, which involves a standard similar to the
    qualified immunity standard. At issue in the case was the government’s
    acquisition of the criminal defendant’s electronic mail from his internet service
    provider. The government relied on the authority of a statute to support its
    argument that law enforcement officers had acted in objective good faith. The
    court held that the government could not rely on the statute if its officers had
    exceeded the scope of the authority granted by the statute. 
    Id. at 289
    .
    In the instant case, both in the district court and on appeal, Sheriff White
    has relied on a provision of the Federal Privacy Act. The district court rejected
    -15-
    that argument, finding that the provision authorizing sharing of information
    between agencies applied only to federal agencies, and so could not authorize
    Sheriff White’s actions here. 707 F.Supp.2d at 1257-59. I agree with that
    conclusion. Moreover, the district judge sua sponte considered whether the
    Sheriff’s conduct might have been permissible under the Health Insurance
    Portability and Accountability Act, Pub. L. 104-191 (HIPAA), and concluded that
    it was not. The lack of statutory authority for the Sheriff’s acquisition of
    Plaintiff’s medical records leaves Plaintiff’s privacy expectation undiminished
    and underscores the unlawfulness of Sheriff White’s acts.
    The majority says that “the scope of the Constitution’s protection for a
    patient’s hospital records can be adequately decided in future cases where the
    qualified immunity overlay isn’t in play (e.g., through motions to suppress
    wrongly seized records or claims for injunctive or declaratory relief).” Maj. op.
    at 27, n.5. But we need not here decide the scope of the protection, only its
    existence. This case is about whether the protection is real or only illusory,
    because if the Sheriff did not violate Mr. Kerns’s rights by acquiring his medical
    information based on nothing more than a desire to investigate whether a crime
    had been committed, there is no protection at all.
    We should not hesitate to declare the obvious: Courts have for decades
    recognized a constitutionally protected right of privacy in the highly personal
    information contained in medical records, and law enforcement therefore must
    -16-
    have something more than merely a legitimate investigatory interest in the
    protected information to justify invading that privacy.
    B
    I am convinced that the district court was correct to hold that Sheriff
    White’s actions violated Jason Kerns’s clearly established right to have his highly
    personal medical information protected from a law enforcement officer whose
    access to that information was supported only by a generalized interest in whether
    a crime might have occurred. As discussed infra, existing law certainly gave the
    Sheriff fair notice that his conduct was unlawful. I believe the majority errs in
    effectively holding that the right to privacy in medical records cannot be “clearly
    established” absent an affirmation of the right in some prior case with factual
    circumstances that differ only trivially.
    As Judge Posner has aptly and succinctly noted in pointing out that denial
    of qualified immunity can be proper even absent an earlier factually identical
    case, “The easiest cases don’t even arise.” K.H. Through Murphy v. Morgan, 
    914 F.2d 846
    , 851 (7th Cir. 1990). This is a pertinent maxim when applied to Sheriff
    White’s actions. Sheriff White’s asking the VA for Mr. Kerns’s private medical
    records in the circumstances existing here is so far out of the realm of
    constitutional behavior that we should not hesitate to hold that it was unlawful,
    even if we did not have precedents closely on point that mandate that result. But
    the precedents that do exist are easily close enough on point that any reasonable
    -17-
    law enforcement officer would have known that constitutionally protected
    medical records cannot be obtained simply because a possibility exists that the
    information would be helpful. Constitutional protection means that such records
    cannot be routinely obtained without a warrant, without consent, without probable
    cause, and without exigent circumstances.
    We have recognized for at least 25 years that the type of intimate, personal
    information contained in medical records is protected under the Constitution.
    Mangels v. Pena, 
    789 F.2d 836
    , 839 (10th Cir. 1986). In Mangels we said that
    information “is constitutionally protected when a legitimate expectation exists
    that it will remain confidential while in the state’s possession.” 
    Id.
     We noted
    specifically there that medical records are within the ambit of this protection. 
    Id.
    (citing United States v. Westinghouse Elec. Corp., 
    638 F.2d 570
    , 577 (3d Cir.
    1980)). We acknowledged in Flanagan v. Munger, 
    890 F.2d 1557
    , 1570 (10th
    Cir. 1989), that judicial recognition of the “constitutional right to privacy [which]
    protects an individual’s interest in preventing disclosure by the government of
    personal matters” goes back at least to Whalen v. Roe, 
    429 U.S. 589
    , 599 & n.24
    (1977).
    Psychiatric records have been afforded even greater protection. The
    Supreme Court has held that an evidentiary privilege exists to protect the
    “confidential communications between a licensed psychotherapist and her patients
    in the course of diagnosis or treatment” under Fed. R. Evid. 501. Jaffee v.
    -18-
    Redmond, 
    518 U.S. 1
    , 15 (1996). Two years after that, we vacated a criminal
    conviction that had been based on statements made by the defendant to his
    psychiatrist, holding that the district court had failed to determine whether the
    privilege could have been overcome in the circumstances. United States v. Glass,
    
    133 F.3d 1356
     (10th Cir. 1998).
    The Supreme Court has taught that the “reasonable expectation of privacy
    enjoyed by the typical patient undergoing diagnostic tests in a hospital is that the
    results of those tests will not be shared with nonmedical personnel without her
    consent.” Ferguson v. City of Charleston, 
    532 U.S. 67
    , 78 (2001). Long before
    Ferguson, this court had recognized the fundamental principle that medical
    records contain very personal and private information and are entitled to
    constitutional protection. See, e.g., Lankford v. City of Hobart, 
    27 F.3d 477
     (10th
    Cir. 1994).
    Here, however, Sheriff White obtained Jason Kerns’s very private medical
    records without any recognition that those materials were constitutionally
    protected. If law enforcement may obtain medical records as easily as they can
    request publicly available information, as was done here, then the special privacy
    protection extended to our medical records by the Constitution is rendered
    meaningless. I therefore disagree with the majority’s dismaying conclusion, see
    Maj. op. at 18-25, that Mr. Kerns did not enjoy a clearly established right to have
    his VA medical records kept private from law enforcement authorities who were
    -19-
    acting without a warrant, without consent, without probable cause – indeed,
    acting only on mere suspicion that a crime possibly may have been committed,
    and in the absence of any exigent circumstances.
    In considering whether Sheriff White’s conduct violated clearly established
    law, we must not engage in a “scavenger hunt for prior cases with precisely the
    same facts” but should instead focus on “the more relevant inquiry,” whether the
    existing law gave Sheriff White “fair notice” that his conduct was
    unconstitutional. Pierce v. Gilchrist, 
    359 F.3d 1279
    , 1298 (10th Cir. 2004).
    “[T]here need not be precise factual correspondence between earlier cases and the
    case at hand, because ‘general statements of the law are not inherently incapable
    of giving fair and clear warning . . . .’” Anderson v. Blake, 
    469 F.3d 910
    , 913-14
    (10th Cir. 2006) (quoting Hope v. Pelzer, 
    536 U.S. 730
    , 741 (2002)).
    Yet the majority goes on to highlight factual distinctions from prior cases
    as it defends its holding that Plaintiff’s rights were not so clearly established that
    a reasonable law enforcement officer would have known that his conduct violated
    those rights. I would adhere to the patently clear principle that individuals have a
    constitutional right to have their medical records kept private from law
    enforcement officers pursuing general investigative ends and acting in the
    absence of any authority to breach that privacy. See Ferguson v. City of
    Charleston, 
    532 U.S. 67
     (2001); Lankford v. City of Hobart, 
    27 F.3d 477
     (10th
    Cir. 1994); A.L.A. v. West Valley City, 
    26 F.3d 989
     (10th Cir. 1994).
    -20-
    Like the district judge in this case, I believe our cases gave more than “fair
    notice” that the constitutional protections afforded private medical records require
    law enforcement to show more than that the records could possibly include
    evidence of a crime. A reasonably competent law enforcement official must be
    held to know that it means something that medical information has for years been
    afforded privacy protection under the Constitution.
    In Lankford v. City of Hobart, 
    27 F.3d 477
     (10th Cir. 1994), the court
    considered the section 1983 claims of two dispatchers of the Hobart Police
    Department. One of these women, Ms. Calvary, had alleged that the former
    police chief, Mr. Medrano, had “used his authority as chief of police to obtain
    Ms. Calvary’s private medical records without her consent from a local hospital
    in an attempt to discredit her or to prove his statements that she was a lesbian.”
    
    27 F.3d at 478
    . We held that the district court had correctly ruled that Ms.
    Calvary had pleaded the violation of her well established right to privacy in her
    medical records, reasoning that “there is no question that an employee’s medical
    records, which may contain intimate facts of a personal nature, are well within
    the ambit of materials entitled to privacy protection.” 
    Id.
     (emphasis added;
    citations and internal quotation marks omitted). And in a second case decided
    over seventeen years ago we recognized that “[t]here is no dispute that
    confidential medical information is entitled to constitutional privacy protection.”
    A.L.A. v. West Valley City, 
    26 F.3d 989
    , 990 (10th Cir. 1994) (emphasis added).
    -21-
    Thus, at least eleven years before Sheriff White obtained Plaintiff Jason
    Kerns’s medical records, we had held that similar conduct violated well
    established rights. The majority, however, is unpersuaded that cases like
    Lankford are sufficient to satisfy the second prong of the qualified immunity test.
    This is because, we are told, “most” of the cases cited by Plaintiff Jason Kerns
    involved police publicly disclosing the private information rather than obtaining it
    for law enforcement efforts. Maj. op. at 24.
    The majority errs by relying on this claimed distinction. In Lankford, for
    example, we determined that the thrust of Ms. Lankford’s claim was that the
    defendant had “seized and reviewed her private medical records.” 
    27 F.3d at 479
    (emphasis added). That the cases protect the individual from having his private
    medical records “seized and reviewed” – and not just from having those records
    publicly disclosed – is only reasonable because, after all, what is at stake here is
    intimately personal information. I think most Americans would not be comforted
    to think that the police could freely peruse their most private medical files so long
    as they did not pass the information along to the general public. Thus, I think the
    majority is quite wrong to attempt to distinguish Lankford and similar precedents
    on this basis.
    Nor am I convinced that the qualified immunity defense should prevail here
    on the ground that Sheriff White sought the information for law enforcement
    purposes. An objectively reasonable law enforcement officer must know that not
    -22-
    all methods are open to him in pursuing his legitimate law enforcement interests.
    Sheriff White had fair notice that constitutional protections afforded to
    individuals’ private medical records restrict the ambit of police actions.
    Nonetheless, Sheriff White proceeded as if Jason Kerns’s medical records were
    entirely unprotected.
    As noted, Plaintiff Jason Kerns bases his section 1983 claim against Sheriff
    White on both the Fourth and the Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution.
    Because Jason Kerns enjoyed a due process right to the non-disclosure of his
    personal medical information, the infringement of that right implicates the Fourth
    Amendment. See, e.g., Douglas v. Dobbs, 
    419 F.3d 1097
    , 1103-04 (10th Cir.
    2005) (Tymkovich, J., concurring). In the Fourth Amendment context, Plaintiff
    relies heavily on Ferguson v. City of Charleston, 
    532 U.S. 67
     (2001). The
    majority attempts to confine Ferguson to very narrow contours, and its
    characterization of Ferguson is unduly limiting. Ferguson did note that in some
    circumstances statutes may require medical providers to release information from
    their patients’ files. Neither the majority nor Sheriff White identifies any such
    statute which applies in this case. The district court nevertheless considered
    whether the VA hospital might have been authorized to release Plaintiff’s records
    under the law enforcement exception to the Health Insurance Portability and
    Accountability Act, Pub. L. 104-191 (HIPAA). The district judge concluded that
    the law enforcement exception did not apply to the Sheriff’s request, 707
    -23-
    F.Supp.2d at 1259, and I agree. The absence of statutory authority in this case
    leaves Jason Kerns’s privacy expectation undiminished and underscores the
    unlawfulness of Sheriff White’s conduct.
    Thus the majority’s treatment of Ferguson does not withstand scrutiny.
    Ferguson reinforced the principle that the Fourth Amendment does protect patient
    records from warrantless searches without probable cause or other justification.
    Ferguson simply added to the existing body of law which constitutes fair warning
    that a law enforcement officer seeking to obtain constitutionally protected
    medical records must comply with the Fourth Amendment. “[A] general
    constitutional rule that has already been established can ‘apply with obvious
    clarity to the specific conduct in question, even though the very action in question
    has [not] previously been held unlawful.’” Anderson v. Blake, 
    469 F.3d 910
    , 917
    (10th Cir. 2006) (quoting Hope v. Pelzer, 
    536 U.S. at 741
    ).
    Sheriff White points out that he asked the VA to provide the records to
    him, presumably instead of going into the VA’s files and taking the records
    himself. This is a distinction without a difference. The Supreme Court long ago
    established that the police cannot breach one’s constitutional rights simply by
    asking another person to do it for them. Stoner v. California, 
    376 U.S. 483
    (1964). On the record before us, the VA hospital lacked any authority —
    apparent, express, or implied — to waive Mr. Kerns’s constitutional right to
    privacy in his medical records. Sheriff White’s liability is not absolved by asking
    -24-
    an unauthorized individual to disclose the protected records instead of procuring
    the records himself. Sheriff White was on notice that medical records are private
    and that the Constitution constrains law enforcement efforts to acquire such
    information. As Thomas Jefferson asserted long ago: “In questions of power,
    then, let no more be said of confidence in man, but bind him down from mischief
    by the chains of the Constitution.” 17
    In sum, Sheriff White is not entitled to immunity from responsibility for his
    actions. I respectfully but most emphatically dissent from the majority’s reversal
    of the district court’s proper denial of Sheriff White’s motion for summary
    judgment.
    C
    Deputies Lindley and Koren are appellants in No. 10-2103 along with
    Sheriff White. The issues raised by them, and the factual background for those
    issues, have almost nothing in common with the issues raised by Sheriff White.
    Instead, Deputies Lindley and Koren, like the appellant in No. 10-2106, Mr.
    Haag, are sued for false arrest and false imprisonment based on their participation
    in the investigation that culminated in the arrest of Jason Kerns and his detention
    for almost nine months before the charges against him were dropped because of
    17
    4 Debates in the Several State Conventions, on the Adoption of the
    Federal Constitution, as Recommended by the General Convention at
    Philadelphia, in 1787 540, 543 (Jonathan Elliot, 2d ed. 1891) (reprinting the
    Kentucky Resolutions of 1798 and listing Thomas Jefferson as author of the draft
    resolutions).
    -25-
    insufficient evidence. For convenience, I will address the appeal of Deputies
    Lindley and Koren in the next section, along with the appeal by Mr. Haag.
    III. Appeal No. 10-2106
    This appeal is brought by Mr. Michael Haag, a ballistics expert who
    participated in the investigation and testified before the federal grand jury that
    indicted Plaintiff Jason Kerns. As just noted, I will also discuss here the appeal
    by Deputies Lindley and Koren, who are actually appellants in No. 10-2103.
    A
    As to Deputies Lindley and Koren, the majority opinion provides a sketch
    of some of the relevant facts.18 I will mention some of the other evidence that
    was presented to the district court and relied upon to support that court’s rulings.
    As to Deputy Koren, his role in the investigation included trying to
    determine the location of the shooter when the helicopter went down. To do that,
    Deputy Koren tried to determine the altitude of the helicopter at the time it had
    been hit and the direction that the helicopter had been facing. Then he attempted
    to ascertain the trajectory of the bullet. Koren attempted to determine the
    trajectory by drawing a line between the point where the bullet entered the
    helicopter and one of the aircraft’s foot pedals, which had also been hit by the
    bullet. Koren did not, however, know how the pedals had been positioned at the
    18
    As with every other aspect of these appeals, the facts are set out in much
    greater detail in the district judge’s very thorough opinion published at 
    707 F. Supp.2d 1190
    .
    -26-
    time. It appears that the pilot was unavailable to assist in the first stages of the
    investigation, presumably as a result of his hospitalization for treatment of
    injuries he sustained from bullet fragments and from the crash landing. In any
    event, Koren simply assumed, or guessed, that the pedals had been in the
    “neutral” position and based his trajectory analysis on that guess, which turned
    out to be wrong. Koren’s conclusion was that the rifle shot had come from
    approximately 1630 feet, as measured on the ground. Later analysis by Mr.
    Welch, an expert retained by Jason Kerns, used information from the pilot as the
    basis for the position of the foot pedals at the time the helicopter was shot and led
    to the conclusion that the shot had come from a distance of about 939 feet. The
    district judge held that a jury could find that Koren had been reckless in his
    trajectory analysis.
    Jason Kerns also submitted evidence to show that the GPS data recovered
    from the crashed helicopter showed that it had not been facing the Kerns’s
    residence at the time it was shot down, a fact that he alleged had been recklessly
    omitted from the affidavit in support of the arrest warrant. This fact is significant
    because the rifle shot entered the helicopter from the front, and almost directly
    from the front it appears. If the helicopter were not facing the Kerns’s property,
    then the information in the affidavit that tended to incriminate Jason Kerns based
    on the trajectory analysis added nothing to the probable cause analysis.
    -27-
    Deputy Lindley was responsible for gathering information from others
    involved in the investigation and for drafting the affidavit in support of the
    application for an arrest warrant. The district judge held that a jury could find
    that Lindley had been reckless in his “adoption of the most favorable of Haag’s
    conclusions” (which are discussed below), based on the fact that Lindley had
    omitted statements by Haag that would have limited the conclusions Haag had
    reached. For example, in relating Haag’s (erroneous) conclusion that the bullet
    fragments recovered from the helicopter could have been fired from one of Jason
    Kerns’s rifles, Lindley omitted Haag’s statement that the bullet could also have
    come from any of a number of other makes of rifles available on the market.
    Moreover, as discussed infra, Haag’s analysis was shown to have been
    unreasonable, and Haag himself withdrew his opinion upon reviewing the
    opinions of Plaintiff Jason Kerns’s expert, Mr. Welch.
    As the majority correctly notes, when false statements have been included
    in an arrest warrant affidavit due to recklessness or malice, our task is to
    determine whether the remaining facts in the affidavit are sufficient to establish
    probable cause. Maj. op. at 28. And when facts have been improperly omitted
    from an arrest warrant affidavit, we include those omitted facts in making the
    probable cause determination. 
    Id.
     The district court recognized these principles
    in its analysis, and in my view reached the correct conclusion that probable cause
    was not established for the arrest of Jason Kerns.
    -28-
    The arrest warrant affidavit is based on the theory that Jason Kerns shot
    down the helicopter from a location within a few feet of his parents’ property
    line. There is simply no other reason for including the flawed analysis which
    estimated that the shot had been fired from about 1630 feet away, while the
    helicopter at the time had been about 1670 feet from the Kerns’s home. But if the
    affidavit had said that the helicopter had been facing away from the Kerns’s home
    when it was hit in the front, the distance from the Kerns’s home would have been
    irrelevant. And if the affidavit had disclosed that the trajectory analysis had been
    based merely on Koren’s guess as to the position of the foot pedals at the time the
    bullet entered the aircraft, that analysis would lack probative value as well.
    Thus the hypothetical affidavit that results from our omitting wrongfully
    included information and including wrongfully omitted information is self-
    contradictory. I would hold that such a hypothetical affidavit would be
    insufficient to establish probable cause.
    Even the incident in which Jason Kerns tried to elude surveillance, while
    probative, deserves little weight in light of the fact that the affidavit reflects that
    the officers were in an unmarked vehicle. Trying to evade an unmarked police
    car is not, I think, as indicative of guilt as trying to avoid a uniformed officer or a
    marked car. 19
    19
    Our analysis must be limited to the facts recited in the affidavit for the
    arrest warrant, as the majority apparently recognizes in its general description of
    (continued...)
    -29-
    Further, as we consider Deputy Lindley’s role, we must consider additional
    information that was wrongly omitted from the affidavit. 20 This includes the fact
    that Mr. Haag’s ballistic analysis, flawed as it was, had concluded that the bullet
    fragments recovered from the helicopter could have been fired from one of Jason
    Kerns’s rifles or from any of a number of other rifles readily available on the
    market.21 Because I conclude (in considering Deputy Koren’s appeal) that
    probable cause is not shown even before adding this omitted information, I
    certainly would hold that Deputy Lindley cannot show that probable cause was
    established in spite of his errors, including the omission of Mr. Haag’s statement
    about the number of rifles on the market that could have fired the shot.
    19
    (...continued)
    its approach on appeal. Maj. op. at 26. The majority thus errs by relying on
    Jason Kerns’s later admission that he believed the car following him was probably
    a police car, a fact that was disclosed in discovery in this case and was not
    mentioned in the affidavit.
    20
    Throughout this discussion I refer to wrongly included or wrongfully
    excluded information. A jury could determine, as the district judge correctly
    noted, that the errors of Lindley and Koren were due to mere negligence, not to
    recklessness or intent to deceive. For our purposes, however, we consider only
    the legal consequences of a possible jury determination that the deputies’ conduct
    was reckless or worse.
    21
    I believe that Deputy Lindley was entitled to rely on Mr. Haag’s analysis,
    although of course he was not entitled to distort it. Thus although as explained
    infra we must, in considering Mr. Haag’s appeal, assume that Jason Kerns’s rifle
    had been conclusively excluded, the reasons for that treatment do not apply to
    Deputy Lindley.
    -30-
    Therefore, I would affirm the district court’s denial of qualified immunity
    to Deputy Lindley and Deputy Koren.
    B
    Mr. Haag is a civilian employee of the City of Albuquerque who works in
    the firearm and toolmark unit of the city’s forensic science center. Mr. Haag is a
    respected member of a national professional group, the Association of Firearms
    and Toolmark Examiners (AFTE). Under the group’s standards for ballistics
    examinations, there are four conclusions that can be reached: (1) identification,
    (2) inconclusive, (3) elimination, and (4) unsuitable. “Identification” is a
    conclusion that the tested bullet fragment, for example, matches the
    characteristics of the weapon under consideration. In this case, Mr Haag
    concluded that the shell casing wrapped in tape that had been found in the trash at
    the Kerns’s residence was identified as having come from Jason Kerns’s FN
    rifle. 22
    “Inconclusive” means that the examiner can neither identify the fragment as
    being from the subject gun nor can he exclude the possibility that it was. Mr.
    Haag concluded that the fragments he examined that had been taken from the
    helicopter and from the pilot’s leg could neither be identified nor excluded as
    22
    Mr. Haag had determined from trace evidence he observed in the
    helicopter that only a high-powered rifle could have fired the shot. In the search
    of the Kerns’s residence, officers had recovered three high-powered rifles. Mr.
    Haag quickly eliminated two of them and thereafter focused on the rifle that is
    referred to herein as the FN rifle.
    -31-
    having come from the FN rifle. His conclusion was, therefore, “inconclusive.”
    Mr. Haag advised Deputy Lindley of this conclusion and also testified to the
    grand jury about it. Mr. Haag opined in his report and his grand jury testimony
    that the bullet fragments could have come from the FN rifle as well as from many
    other firearms available on the market.
    Plaintiff Jason Kerns retained his own ballistics expert, Mr. Welch. Mr.
    Welch testified that, upon using a microscope to compare the first bullet fragment
    to a bullet that had been test-fired from Plaintiff’s FN rifle, the first step of his
    analysis, it took him only five seconds to conclude that the FN rifle should have
    been eliminated as the source of the fragments that had been recovered from the
    crash. Mr. Welch testified that Mr. Haag was recognized in the field as a
    competent examiner and that he, Welch, personally had reviewed some of Mr.
    Haag’s work before and had never disagreed before with one of Mr. Haag’s
    conclusions. In this case, however, Mr. Welch testified that he could not
    comprehend how Haag had reached a different conclusion: “It just boggles my
    mind.” The two examined projectiles were “grossly different.” Welch opined
    that it was “reckless disregard of the facts” for Haag to disregard the gross
    discrepancies between the fragments recovered from the helicopter and the bullet
    that had been test-fired from the FN rifle.
    The district judge, taking the evidence in the light most favorable to Jason
    Kerns as the non-movant, held that a reasonable jury could find that Mr. Haag’s
    -32-
    decision not to exclude the FN rifle “rose to the level of reckless disregard.” 707
    F. Supp.2d at 1279. The judge further held that a reasonable jury could also find
    “intent.” Id.
    Before proceeding to the probable cause analysis that we must undertake on
    the assumption that the affidavit should have declared that the FN rifle had been
    eliminated, I mention one further point on which I disagree with the majority.
    This has to do with the tape-wrapped shell casing that had been found in the
    Kerns’s trash. Mr. Haag had concluded that this shell casing had been fired from
    the FN rifle, and that conclusion has never been questioned. The majority says
    that this bit of evidence helps to support a determination of probable cause – even
    when considered with the fact that the affidavit should have reflected that the FN
    rifle had been excluded – because it supposedly showed that Jason Kerns had
    something to hide. This is singularly unpersuasive to me. No motive for hiding
    an object that could not have been incriminating is suggested.
    What is left in the arrest affidavit after omitting the faulty ballistics
    analysis is, in my view, inadequate to establish probable cause even if sufficient
    to have aroused the officers’ suspicion. The affidavit for arrest warrant reflects
    that Jason Kerns rushed to the scene of the crash and offered his observations.
    The affidavit reflects that several other witnesses also said that they had heard a
    gunshot, and a fair inference is that their information, like Mr. Kerns’s, was not
    sufficiently accurate to permit the investigators to determine the location of the
    -33-
    shooter. Even the incident in which Kerns tried to elude surveillance, while
    probative, is not of much weight, as I have noted supra. Therefore, I believe that
    the majority errs when it concludes that it would not have made a difference if
    Mr. Haag had excluded the FN rifle. I acknowledge that the affidavit contains
    some inculpatory material and those facts would have justified further
    investigation of Jason Kerns. But I do not agree that such material established
    probable cause for his arrest.
    A law enforcement expert may not take reckless liberties with the truth or
    lie intentionally and be immune from the consequences. Pierce v. Gilchrist, 
    359 F.3d 1279
     (10th Cir. 2004). Qualified immunity does not protect the dishonest
    state actor. Malley v. Briggs, 
    475 U.S. 335
    , 341 (1986) (“[T]he qualified
    immunity defense . . . provides ample protection to all but the plainly incompetent
    or those who knowingly violate the law.”).
    In sum, then, I conclude that the arrest and prosecution of Jason Kerns
    would not have been supported by probable cause absent the faulty analysis by
    Mr. Haag. We lack jurisdiction to review the district court’s holding that a
    reasonable jury could find that Mr. Haag’s errors were the result of reckless
    disregard for the truth. If a jury were to make that finding, it would be justified
    under Pierce v. Gilchrist in holding Mr. Haag liable for his conduct. Therefore, I
    would affirm the district court’s denial of immunity to Mr. Haag.
    -34-
    Conclusion
    Accordingly, I respectfully dissent. 23
    23
    A number of issues raised by the parties were not reached in the majority
    opinion because the majority’s disposition effectively mooted them. I have not
    attempted in this dissent to reach every such issue.
    -35-