Cromer v. Brown ( 1996 )


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  • PUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    PATRICK H. CROMER,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    JOHNNY MACK BROWN, individually
    and in his official capacity as
    Greenville County Sheriff;
    No. 94-1403
    GREENVILLE COUNTY SHERIFF'S
    OFFICE,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY
    COMMISSION,
    Amicus Curiae.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of South Carolina, at Greenville.
    Henry M. Herlong, District Judge.
    (CA-92-3555-6-20-AK)
    Argued: December 7, 1994
    Decided: July 15, 1996
    Before RUSSELL and MICHAEL, Circuit Judges, and MESSITTE,
    United States District Judge for the District of Maryland, sitting by
    designation.
    _________________________________________________________________
    Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded by published opin-
    ion. Judge Michael wrote the opinion, in which Judge Russell and
    Judge Messitte joined.
    _________________________________________________________________
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Stephen John Henry, TAYLOR & HENRY, Greenville,
    South Carolina, for Appellant. Anna Maria Conner, HAYNS-
    WORTH, BALDWIN, JOHNSON & GREAVES, P.A., Greenville,
    South Carolina, for Appellees. ON BRIEF: Thomas A. Bright,
    HAYNSWORTH, BALDWIN, JOHNSON & GREAVES, P.A.,
    Greenville, South Carolina, for Appellees. James R. Neely, Jr., Dep-
    uty General Counsel, Gwendolyn Young Reams, Associate General
    Counsel, Lorraine C. Davis, Assistant General Counsel, Robert J.
    Gregory, EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY COMMIS-
    SION, Washington, D.C., for Amicus Curiae.
    _________________________________________________________________
    OPINION
    MICHAEL, Circuit Judge:
    Patrick Cromer, an African American who sued his former
    employer (Johnny Mack Brown, the Sheriff of Greenville County,
    South Carolina) for racial discrimination and First Amendment viola-
    tions, appeals from the grant of summary judgment to the sheriff on
    some claims and the dismissal of others. We affirm in part, reverse
    in part, and remand for further proceedings.
    First, Cromer claims that because of his race Sheriff Brown
    demoted him from captain to lieutenant, and then fired him from his
    job as lieutenant, in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of
    1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000 et seq. The district court held that Cromer
    was not protected under Title VII because (as both captain and lieu-
    tenant) he fit within the statute's exclusion for the "personal staff" of
    an elected official. We affirm the district court on the captaincy exclu-
    sion, but we reverse on the lieutenancy. We hold that Cromer was not
    on Sheriff Brown's personal staff when he was a lieutenant, so the
    Title VII claim is remanded insofar as it charges that Cromer was
    fired from his job as lieutenant because of race.
    Second, Cromer claims that he was demoted and discharged
    because of his race in violation of the Civil Rights Act of 1991, 42
    2
    U.S.C. § 1981. Sheriff Brown took these actions before the effective
    date of the amendments to § 1981, and the district court dismissed the
    § 1981 claims on the ground that the Civil Rights Act of 1991 is not
    applied retroactively. We summarily affirm the dismissal of these
    claims. See Rivers v. Roadway Express, Inc., 
    114 S. Ct. 1510
    , 1513
    (1994) (the Civil Rights Act of 1991 does not apply retroactively to
    cover conduct completed prior to the law's enactment).
    Third, invoking 42 U.S.C. § 1983, Cromer claims that Sheriff
    Brown fired him from his job as lieutenant in violation of his First
    Amendment rights of free speech and association because Cromer
    joined a black officers' association and spoke up about perceived
    racial discrimination in the sheriff's office. On these claims, the dis-
    trict court granted summary judgment to Sheriff Brown in his individ-
    ual capacity, holding that the sheriff was entitled to qualified
    immunity. We disagree and reverse on this point. Cromer had a
    clearly established right (of which a reasonable official would have
    known) to speak up about the widespread perception of racial dis-
    crimination in the sheriff's department and to join an association of
    black officers formed to bring complaints of discrimination to the
    sheriff's attention. To the extent the § 1983 claims were against Sher-
    iff Brown in his official capacity, we affirm the district court's hold-
    ing that the sheriff, as a state official, is immune from suit for money
    damages. We reverse the district court's determination that the doc-
    trine of official immunity protects the sheriff from claims for injunc-
    tive relief.
    I.
    A.
    The facts about Cromer's different roles as captain and lieutenant
    are not in dispute. We construe the other facts in the light most favor-
    able to Cromer, the non-moving party below. See Anderson v. Liberty
    Lobby, Inc., 
    477 U.S. 242
    (1986).
    Sheriff Brown's predecessor in office hired Cromer to work as a
    deputy sheriff in 1974. In 1976 Brown was elected sheriff. Upon tak-
    ing office in January 1977, Brown recommissioned Cromer as a dep-
    uty. Within the next two weeks Sheriff Brown promoted Cromer
    3
    twice, first to sergeant and then to lieutenant. Cromer served as a lieu-
    tenant from 1977 until 1988.
    During the twelve-year period from 1977 to 1988, Sheriff Brown
    denied Cromer a promotion to captain several times. According to
    Cromer, Sheriff Brown refused to promote him because of Cromer's
    long-term relationship with a white woman, Beth Johnson. Specifi-
    cally, Cromer testified (in deposition) as follows:
    Question: [When you asked Sheriff Brown about promo-
    tion to captain], [w]hat did he say?
    Cromer: At that time, I was dating a white female and he
    told me that he would have a serious problem with me being
    a captain for him, since I was dating that white girl. . . .
    Question: All right. Tell me about that conversation.
    When did this take place? . . .
    Cromer: That conversation ha[s] taken place many times
    with myself and Sheriff Brown over the years.
    ***
    Question: I want to know [about each one of the conversa-
    tions] to the best of your recollection.
    Cromer: All I'm telling you, we had many conversations
    concerning Beth and he made it good and clear that he
    didn't appreciate interracial dating. He didn't like it and he
    wasn't tolerated [sic] for it and he just couldn't handle it and
    he made it good and plain to me. And many times, he threat-
    ened to terminate me . . . .
    The sheriff also let Cromer know that he should not bring Beth to the
    Annual Sheriff's Office Awards Banquet. This led Lieutenant Cromer
    to tell his immediate supervisor, Captain Sorrow, that "I would not be
    attending those awards if I couldn't bring Beth."
    4
    In 1988 Major Barnett, the officer of highest rank under Sheriff
    Brown, suggested to the sheriff that he promote Cromer to captain.
    Major Barnett later told Cromer "that the Sheriff had reservations, but
    he [Barnett] was standing tall to try to get me promoted because he
    felt like I was qualified and it was about time." In June 1988 Cromer
    again talked with the sheriff about the possibility of a promotion.
    Again, Beth, Cromer's white companion, was a subject of discussion.
    However, on July 1, 1988, Sheriff Brown made Cromer the first black
    captain in the history of the Greenville County Sheriff's Office.
    As one of four captains, Cromer stood high in the chain of com-
    mand in the sheriff's office. He commanded one of four divisions,
    Uniform Patrol, and supervised 185 officers, including five lieuten-
    ants and twenty-six sergeants. Cromer was outranked only by Major
    Barnett and Sheriff Brown. Together, the four captains, the major and
    the sheriff made up the "command staff." The command staff met
    weekly to discuss operations, policy and procedure. Cromer felt he
    had a "strong, effective voice" in policy discussions when he was cap-
    tain. The command staff was also responsible for community rela-
    tions. Once, while Cromer was captain, the command staff met with
    the president of the Greenville County NAACP. Cromer told the pres-
    ident, "I [am] the Captain of Uniform Patrol and . . . black, if there
    [are] racial problems [in the sheriff's office], they [are] brought
    directly to me and we [will] handle them."
    Cromer's tenure as captain did not go smoothly. Cromer apparently
    believes that certain white lieutenants orchestrated a campaign to
    have him ousted as captain. Sheriff Brown says that certain lieuten-
    ants did begin to question Cromer's methods of supervision and that
    Major Barnett investigated the complaints by interviewing the com-
    plaining lieutenants and several sergeants. Barnett then reported to
    Brown, who demoted Cromer from captain to lieutenant on March 13,
    1991. Sheriff Brown asserts that he demoted Cromer because he had
    "lost his ability and his effectiveness as a commander of the uniform
    patrol." According to the sheriff, Cromer lost his effectiveness
    because he supervised through fear and retaliation. Cromer claims his
    demotion was because of his race. He was treated differently, he says,
    than any white captain whose performance was ever questioned.
    5
    White captains with performance problems had simply been reas-
    signed to other duties without taking a demotion in rank.1
    As a lieutenant Cromer no longer participated in command staff
    meetings. He rarely saw Sheriff Brown. Cromer's only formal contact
    with the sheriff occurred at monthly meetings, which were attended
    by every officer in the department. As a lieutenant Cromer was nei-
    ther involved in creating department policy nor consulted on any pro-
    posed changes to policy.
    On May 1, 1991, six weeks after Cromer's demotion, most (about
    30) of the sheriff department's 32 black deputies met after work at a
    private residence. There, under the leadership of Sergeant Paul Guy,
    they formed a group called the Black Law Enforcement Officers
    Association (the "Association"). Cromer attended the Association's
    first four meetings. Each meeting was held after work at a private res-
    idence. At the Association's meetings the black officers discussed
    their concerns about racial problems in the sheriff's department. After
    the fourth meeting, in mid-May, 1991, the Association submitted pri-
    vately to Sheriff Brown an unsigned letter entitled"Race Relationship
    Within The Greenville County Sheriffs Office As Perceived By Black
    Deputies."2
    The seven-page letter began by saying that "Black officers within
    the [Greenville County Sheriff's Office] have formed a committee to
    discuss the racial climate within the Sheriff's Office." The letter's
    introduction explained that the black officers had come to a "consen-
    sus" that the command staff and certain unwritten policies in the
    department were "inhibit[ing] the advancement of Black officers." "It
    is also the consensus among Black officers," the letter continued,
    "that supervisors are attempting to target, categorize, and defame
    Black officers who exhibit any form of leadership qualities." The let-
    ter's introduction ended with the complaint "that the overall white
    structure" in the sheriff's office had little or no understanding of "the
    _________________________________________________________________
    1 As we indicate in other parts of this opinion, we are affirming the
    judgment in favor of Sheriff Brown as to all of Cromer's claims for dis-
    criminatory demotion.
    2 Apparently the letter was slipped under Sheriff Brown's door while
    he was out of the office.
    6
    Black ethos," which led "to a High level of insensitivity toward Black
    officers. This insensitivity is both destructive and dangerous in
    regards to . . . the overall effectiveness of the[sheriff's office] as a
    Law Enforcement Agency."
    Next in the letter the black officers discussed several areas where
    they believed blacks were receiving unequal treatment. These
    included minority recruitment, cross-training and transfers, promo-
    tion, make-up of the Office of Professional Standards (internal
    affairs), off-duty jobs and equipment.
    As to recruitment, the Association said that the department's
    recruitment officer "lack[ed] the needed expertise in minority recruit-
    ment." Recruiters projected an image of the department that "discour-
    age[d] Black applicants."
    As to cross-training and transfers, the Association said:
    It is felt that [white] supervisors have deliberately limited
    Black officer's growth by not advancing qualified Black
    officers. This is transmitted by White supervisors recom-
    mending White officers for cross training in certain areas
    within CID such as, white collar crime section, housebreak-
    ing section, school district and major crime section. White
    supervisors within these divisions have made their position
    known to supervisors in uniform patrol as to whom they
    want and do not want. Therefore, many officers never have
    the opportunity to display their abilities.
    The letter charged that the supervisors of two prestigious units, white
    collar and major crimes, had "made a conscious effort" to keep "their
    sections exclusively White."
    Lack of promotional opportunities for blacks was a theme that
    appeared throughout the letter. Major Barnett was criticized for recent
    newspaper comments that, according to the Association, "le[ft] the
    reader with the opinion that there are no Black officers with the capa-
    bilities and qualifications to be promoted." Black officers were dis-
    couraged and many felt that "favoritism is shown toward White
    7
    officers with less education and less job experience. Black officers are
    beginning to lose faith in the promotional process." Specifically, the
    Association charged that promotional boards were biased against
    black officers, particularly because the boards did not exercise appro-
    priate independence.
    The Association asserted that the Office of Professional Standards
    (internal affairs), which was staffed by white officers, conducted
    internal investigations in ways that "pit White officers against Black
    officers." The Association suggested the assignment of a black officer
    to internal affairs.
    As to off-duty jobs, the Association charged that the highest paying
    jobs (apparently those in retail stores) went to white officers. As to
    equipment, the group complained that "White officers get the first
    choice in new equipment." Finally, the black officers believed there
    was a need for a black negotiator on the SWAT team.
    Sheriff Brown was quite upset by the letter, and he blamed Cromer.
    "I suspected Cromer," the sheriff testified,"because of his reduction
    in rank. In the past 15 to 17 years prior to this, there was never any
    hint of discontent, never. No rumors, nothing. I concluded it had to
    have started after Cromer was demoted. Something like this does not
    happen overnight."
    Sheriff Brown admitted that he was very angry at Cromer for not
    coming to his (the sheriff's) defense. The sheriff said he was not
    angry because Cromer had gone to the meetings of the Association.
    Rather, the sheriff said, he was angry "[b]ecause [Cromer], above
    anybody else, should have known that none of these complaints were
    legitimate." According to the sheriff, Cromer should have known the
    complaints were not true because Cromer before his demotion sat on
    promotion and interview boards and participated in command staff
    meetings where policy was made. The sheriff therefore believed that
    Cromer could have answered all of the complaints at the Association
    meetings, providing a full defense for the sheriff.
    On May 22, 1991, Sheriff Brown sent each black officer a six-page
    response to the Association's letter. The sheriff opened his response
    by explaining that "I have personally worked to create a personnel
    8
    process that is colorblind, and emphasizes merit over personalities."
    The sheriff denied each of the charges, but he nevertheless expressed
    a willingness to work hard to cure any perception that race played a
    role in the operations of his office.
    In his written response Sheriff Brown placed much of the blame for
    any problems at the feet of a "black Captain, who was a member of
    the command staff until recently." The sheriff was referring to Cro-
    mer. He said that Cromer never complained that black officers were
    being discriminated against in assignment and promotion. According
    to the sheriff, in a meeting between the command staff and the presi-
    dent of the Greenville County NAACP, Cromer assured the president
    that "we had no racial problems in the Sheriff's Office." The sheriff
    said that Cromer had congratulated the department's recruiter for out-
    standing minority hires. Finally, the sheriff said that because Cromer
    had recently been in charge of Uniform Patrol, any failure to transfer
    black officers out of Uniform Patrol into more prestigious units
    "would have had . . . [Cromer's] support and endorsement." In short,
    the sheriff blamed Cromer for his troubles.
    Sheriff Brown closed his letter to the black officers as follows:
    I have reviewed all of the above complaints and tried to
    respond to them. I am deeply disturbed that such serious
    complaints exist. If they are factually documented, I will
    take strong action to eliminate them. It appears that most of
    the complaints dealing with employment and promotions are
    not justified by the facts. . . . However, I am equally con-
    cerned with even the perception of racial division. . . . Even
    though we have a chain of command, my door is always
    open for any officer to bring up complaints of such a serious
    nature.
    Sheriff Brown ended with this warning: "I will . . . not tolerate any
    individual of any race using racial issues to pursue personal vendet-
    tas."
    On May 27, 1991, five days after Sheriff Brown's letter to the
    black officers, Sergeant Rodney Watts, a member of the black offi-
    cers' Association, wrote to the sheriff. Watts reported that Lieutenant
    9
    Kelley had claimed that Sheriff Brown made a racist remark about
    Watts while talking with Kelley at the awards banquet about two
    months earlier. Sergeant Watts requested a meeting with the sheriff.
    Upon getting the letter, the sheriff called Watts to his office. Accord-
    ing to Watts, when he walked in, Sheriff Brown "slammed that door
    behind me, and he said ``I can't believe you have the [expletive
    deleted] audacity to send me this letter.' . . .``Pat Cromer put you up
    to this, didn't he?'" Later in the meeting the sheriff again accused
    Cromer. Both times Watts told the sheriff that Cromer had nothing to
    do with Watts' letter. Within a week of this meeting Sheriff Brown
    fired both Sergeant Watts and Cromer.
    The personnel order terminating Cromer said simply that he was
    fired for conduct "unbecoming an officer." Cromer learned that he
    was to be fired from Major Barnett. Barnett told Cromer he was being
    terminated for wrongfully accusing one officer of fixing a drunk driv-
    ing ticket and for telling another officer that Sergeant Guy had
    reported (at an Association meeting) that he had been asked to plant
    drugs in the former county administrator's car. According to Cromer,
    Major Barnett also admitted that Cromer's membership in the black
    officers' Association and the Association's letter to the sheriff "had
    a lot to do with" Cromer's termination. Cromer was then allowed to
    see the sheriff, who said only, "Pat I'm very disappointed in you and
    I don't even want to talk to you."3
    Later, at a hearing before the South Carolina Employment Security
    Commission, Major Barnett represented the sheriff's office in an
    effort to block Cromer from receiving unemployment compensation.
    Major Barnett testified that Cromer's firing was due in part to his
    involvement in the Association and the "list of grievances" presented
    to the sheriff. Barnett accused Cromer of using the Association for
    personal gain instead of refuting the black officers' allegations with
    facts.
    _________________________________________________________________
    3 Cromer says he was later told of another reason for his firing: that he
    had allowed his lieutenants to keep two sets of overtime books when he
    was captain. In other words, not all overtime was turned in for payroll;
    overtime not turned in was kept in a second, unofficial set of books and
    could be taken as "comp time." Cromer responds to all allegations by
    denying any wrongdoing or improper conduct on his part.
    10
    B.
    After his firing Cromer was granted a hearing by the Sheriff's
    Department Grievance Board, an internal body. The board (made up
    of a captain and two lieutenants) heard Cromer's case and concluded
    that his firing was justified. Cromer then filed a complaint with the
    federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), which
    determined that Cromer's discharge violated Title VII but that his
    demotion did not. The EEOC issued Cromer a right-to-sue letter.
    Cromer filed this suit in district court on December 21, 1992. As
    we explained in the introduction, the district court disposed of Cro-
    mer's case by granting summary judgment to Sheriff Brown on some
    claims and by dismissing others. Cromer now appeals.
    II.
    We must first decide whether the district court was wrong to con-
    clude that Cromer, both as lieutenant and captain, fell under Title
    VII's exclusion for the "personal staff" of an elected official. This
    conclusion led the district court to enter summary judgment for Sher-
    iff Brown on Cromer's Title VII claims.
    Title VII defines an "employee" as an "individual employed by an
    employer." 42 U.S.C. § 2000e(f). The definition, however, excludes
    "any person elected to public office in any State or political subdivi-
    sion of any State by the qualified voters thereof, or any person chosen
    by such officer to be on the officer's personal staff . . . ." 
    Id. The reach
    of Title VII's personal staff exclusion is a question of
    federal, not state, law. Curl v. Reavis, 
    740 F.2d 1323
    , 1327 (4th Cir.
    1984). "State law is only relevant ``insofar as it describes the plain-
    tiff's position, including his duties and the way he is hired, supervised
    and fired.'" 
    Id. (internal citation
    omitted). We must, therefore, ascer-
    tain as a matter of federal law what Congress meant by the term "per-
    sonal staff."
    Although the statute does not define "personal staff," the word
    "personal" certainly narrows the reach of the exclusion to some inti-
    11
    mate subset of the elected official's staff. With that observation in
    mind, we look beyond the text to the exclusion's objectives as dis-
    cussed in our prior cases. We have concluded that"``Congress
    intended for the personal staff exception to apply only to those indi-
    viduals who are in highly intimate and sensitive positions of responsi-
    bility on the staff of an elected official.'" Brewster v. Barnes, 
    788 F.2d 985
    , 990 (4th Cir. 1986) (quoting 
    Curl, 740 F.2d at 1328
    (quot-
    ing Owens v. Rush, 
    654 F.2d 1370
    , 1375 (10th Cir. 1981)).4 Three
    times we have applied the personal staff exemption in cases involving
    sheriffs' offices. United States v. Gregory, 
    818 F.2d 1114
    (4th Cir.),
    cert. denied, 
    484 U.S. 847
    (1987); Curl, 
    740 F.2d 1323
    ; Brewster,
    
    788 F.2d 985
    . In each of these cases we were "unwilling to treat all
    deputy sheriffs as employees, or to exclude them wholesale from [the
    statute's] protection." 
    Curl, 740 F.2d at 1328
    . Instead, we explained
    that whether a given deputy would be treated as a member of a sher-
    iff's personal staff depended on a "careful examination of the nature
    and circumstances of her role in the Sheriff's Department." Id.; see
    
    Brewster, 788 F.2d at 990
    ; 
    Gregory, 818 F.2d at 1117
    .
    In concluding that Cromer was "personal staff" as both captain and
    lieutenant, the district court said it applied the following "four pri-
    mary factors" this court "has considered":
    1. Is promotion of the employee solely up to the sheriff;
    2. Does the employee occupy a position high in the chain
    of command;
    3. Does the employee have a highly intimate working rela-
    tionship with the sheriff; and
    4. Does the employee contribute to the making of policy
    decisions in the sheriff's department?
    _________________________________________________________________
    4 Brewster involved the Equal Pay Act. However, the "definition of
    ``employee' in Title VII contains a ``personal staff' exemption which is
    essentially identical to the exemption contained in the Equal Pay Act."
    
    Brewster, 788 F.2d at 990
    n.7. Therefore, Brewster's reasoning applies
    here.
    12
    Cromer v. Brown, C/A No. 6:92-3555-20AK, mem. op. at 4 (D.S.C.
    Feb. 28, 1994).
    We have considered the factors listed by the district court, but we
    have never characterized them as "primary." Indeed, we have often
    considered factors left off the district court's list. We have, for exam-
    ple, always emphasized that the "personal staff" exemption is to be
    narrowly construed. 
    Gregory, 818 F.2d at 1117
    ; 
    Brewster, 788 F.2d at 990
    ; 
    Curl, 740 F.2d at 1328
    . We have asked whether the employ-
    ee's position "was created and compensated by the county pursuant
    to state law."5 
    Gregory, 818 F.2d at 1117
    ; see 
    Curl, 740 F.2d at 1328
    .
    We have inquired about the full scope of the employee's duties, with-
    out limiting the inquiry to whether he is a policy maker. 
    Curl, 740 F.2d at 1328
    ; 
    Brewster, 788 F.2d at 991
    . We have explored whether
    the employee worked in the official's political campaign. 
    Brewster, 788 F.2d at 990
    . And we have considered it significant whether the
    employee worked under the direction of the official or someone else.
    
    Curl, 740 F.2d at 1328
    .
    The factors we have added to those mentioned by the district court
    are not intended to round out a rigid list. A fact-specific examination
    of the employee's role is what is required. In general, the examination
    should focus on whether the employee worked in an intimate and sen-
    sitive position of trust, close to the elected official.
    When Cromer was a lieutenant, the undisputed facts make it clear
    that Cromer was not a member of Sheriff Brown's personal staff.
    First, Cromer did not report directly to the sheriff. He reported to his
    captain, who in turn reported to the major, who reported directly to
    the sheriff. Second, as a lieutenant, Cromer rarely saw Sheriff Brown
    and did not work under the sheriff's personal direction. As a rule Cro-
    mer saw the sheriff only at the monthly meetings of all supervisors,
    including sergeants and lieutenants. At those meetings the sheriff
    spoke only for a few minutes about very general matters.6 Third, as
    _________________________________________________________________
    5 This can be relevant because when a position is created and compen-
    sated under state law, the elected official (the employer) is not required
    to allocate funds from his discretionary budget to pay the employee's sal-
    ary.
    6 Although the record is not clear on the point, it appears that Sheriff
    Brown may have attended at least one platoon meeting with Lieutenant
    Cromer and those in Cromer's platoon.
    13
    a lieutenant, Cromer had no hand in creating, or even substantively
    discussing, department policy. Fourth, Lieutenant Cromer was not a
    member of the command staff. Fifth, Cromer's termination was
    reviewed by the Grievance Board, which could have recommended
    reinstatement.7 Sixth, Cromer apparently did not assist in any of Sher-
    iff Brown's election efforts. Nor was Cromer initially hired as a dep-
    uty by Brown. Brown's predecessor in office hired Cromer, and
    Brown simply recommissioned Cromer as a deputy. Seventh, Cro-
    mer's position was created and compensated pursuant to state law.
    See S.C. Code Ann. § 23-13-10 et seq . Together, the undisputed facts
    establish as a matter of law that Cromer was not a member of Sheriff
    Brown's personal staff during his service as a lieutenant. We, there-
    fore, reverse the district court on that issue.
    Different facts establish, as a matter of law, that during his service
    as captain Cromer was on Sheriff Brown's personal staff. First, there
    were only four captains and all were members of the command staff.
    Second, as a member of the command staff, Captain Cromer met
    weekly with the sheriff, the major and the other three captains to dis-
    cuss the substance and merits of proposed operations, policies and
    procedures. In fact, Cromer himself acknowledged that as a captain
    he exerted a "strong, effective voice" on department policy. Third,
    Sheriff Brown personally promoted Cromer to captain and personally
    demoted him. There is no suggestion that Cromer could have taken
    his demotion from captain to the Grievance Board for review. And
    finally, as a captain, Cromer occasionally dealt with citizens' com-
    plaints and other public matters which required him to speak outside
    the department on behalf of the sheriff. Together, these facts demon-
    strate as a matter of law that when Cromer was a captain, he served
    on Sheriff Brown's personal staff. Therefore, we affirm the district
    court's ruling to that effect.
    _________________________________________________________________
    7 When a public official cedes exclusive authority to hire or discharge
    an employee, the personal staff exclusion would not apply. In this case,
    Sheriff Brown did not cede his exclusive authority, but he did permit the
    Grievance Board to make a recommendation.
    14
    III.
    We next consider Cromer's constitutional claims, brought under
    § 1983. Cromer asserts that his termination violated his First Amend-
    ment rights to speak freely and to associate. The district court, how-
    ever, determined that these asserted rights were not clearly established
    in June of 1991, when Cromer was fired. Therefore, the district court
    held that Sheriff Brown (in his individual capacity) was entitled to
    immunity from these claims.
    A.
    The doctrine of qualified immunity would provide Sheriff Brown,
    in his individual capacity, with a full defense to Cromer's § 1983
    charges if Brown's conduct did not "violate clearly established statu-
    tory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have
    known." Harlow v. Fitzgerald, 
    457 U.S. 800
    , 818 (1982). The pur-
    pose of the qualified immunity defense under § 1983 is to allow gov-
    ernment officials "the freedom to exercise fair judgment" without
    "being blindsided by liability derived from newly invented rights or
    new, unforeseen applications of pre-existing rights." Pinder v.
    Johnson, 
    54 F.3d 1169
    , 1173 (4th Cir.) (en banc), cert. denied, 
    116 S. Ct. 530
    (1995).
    As we observed in Pinder:
    The linchpin of qualified immunity is objective reasonable-
    ness. So long as the officer's actions, viewed from the per-
    spective of the officer at the time, can be seen within the
    range of reasonableness, then no liability will attach.
    Important to this reasonableness inquiry is whether the
    rights alleged to have been violated were clearly established
    at the time of the challenged actions.
    If the law supporting the allegedly violated rights was not
    clearly established, then immunity must lie. Where the law
    is clearly established, and where no reasonable officer could
    15
    believe he was acting in accordance with it, qualified immu-
    nity will not attach.
    
    Id. (internal citation
    s omitted).
    The right allegedly violated must be articulated in a "particular-
    ized" and "relevant" way. Anderson v. Creighton, 
    483 U.S. 635
    , 640
    (1987). A plaintiff may not merely assert the violation of some "over-
    arching entitlement" to a named right. Pinder , 54 F.3d at 1173.
    Instead, he must be sufficiently specific to allow us to decide whether
    "a reasonable official would understand that what he [did] violates
    that right." 
    Anderson, 483 U.S. at 640
    . But "[i]t is important not to be
    overspecific -- there need not be a prior case directly on all fours
    with the facts presented to the official." 
    Pinder, 54 F.3d at 1173
    . Still,
    we must be able to conclude that, in light of pre-existing law, the
    unlawfulness of the challenged action was apparent to the official.
    
    Anderson, 483 U.S. at 640
    ; 
    Pinder, 54 F.3d at 1173
    .
    1.
    Cromer's first allegation is that Sheriff Brown violated his right to
    speak freely on matters of public concern by firing him for joining in
    the Association's letter that raised specific charges of racial discrimi-
    nation and animus in the sheriff's office.
    At the time of Cromer's discharge in June 1991, it was established
    that a government official "may not discharge an employee on a basis
    that infringes that employee's constitutionally protected interest in
    freedom of speech." Rankin v. McPherson, 
    483 U.S. 378
    , 383 (1987)
    (citing Perry v. Sindermann, 
    408 U.S. 593
    , 597 (1972)) (emphasis
    added). To determine whether a public employee's speech was consti-
    tutionally protected, we undertake a two-step analysis. First, we ask
    whether the employee spoke as a citizen on a matter of "public con-
    cern." Connick v. Myers, 
    461 U.S. 138
    , 146 (1983). If he did, the next
    step requires "balanc[ing] the interests of the [employee], as a citizen,
    in commenting upon matters of public concern and the interest of the
    State, as an employer, in promoting the efficiency of the public ser-
    vices it performs through its employees." Pickering v. Board of Educ.,
    
    391 U.S. 563
    , 568 (1968). If these two steps yield a right that was
    clearly established in 1991, we "proceed to determine whether a rea-
    16
    sonable person in the official's position would have known that his
    actions violated that right." DiMeglio v. Haines, 
    45 F.3d 790
    , 794-95
    n.1 (4th Cir. 1995) (citing 
    Harlow, 457 U.S. at 817-18
    ).
    a.
    We decide whether Cromer spoke as a citizen on a matter of public
    concern by examining the "content, form and context" of his speech.
    
    Connick, 461 U.S. at 147-48
    .
    We turn first to the content of Cromer's speech, the letter the black
    officers' Association sent to Sheriff Brown. The theme of the letter
    was that the "effectiveness of the [sheriff's office] as a Law Enforce-
    ment Agency" was being destroyed by internal racial discrimination.
    The seven-page letter included the following charges of discrimina-
    tion by an "overall white [management] structure": (1) ineffective
    minority recruitment efforts, (2) lack of opportunity for black officers
    to cross-train in and transfer into prestigious units, such as white col-
    lar and major crimes, (3) lack of promotional opportunities for blacks
    and loss of faith in the promotion process, (4) methods of investiga-
    tion by the all-white internal affairs unit that caused racial polariza-
    tion, and (5) favoritism to white officers in the allocation of new
    equipment. Because these specific complaints prompted an expression
    of concern about the inability of the sheriff's office to carry out its
    vital public mission effectively, we conclude that Cromer and the
    other members of the Association spoke as citizens, not merely as
    employees. See 
    id. at 147.
    Of course, the allegations themselves,
    about racial discrimination within a law enforcement agency, are mat-
    ters of serious public import. Rode v. Dellarciprete, 
    845 F.2d 1195
    ,
    1201 (3d Cir. 1985) (holding that allegations of racial animus within
    the state police raised a matter of "grave public concern"); Leonard
    v. City of Columbus, 
    705 F.2d 1299
    , 1305 (11th Cir. 1983) (holding
    that allegations of racially discriminatory hiring and distribution of
    "beat" assignments raised "matters of interest to the community"),
    cert. denied, 
    468 U.S. 1204
    (1984). Cf. 
    Connick, 461 U.S. at 146
    , 148
    n.8 (characterizing allegations of a school district's "racially discrimi-
    natory policies" as "a matter inherently of public concern").
    Nothing in the form (private letter with no member of the Associa-
    tion identified) or context (slipped under the sheriff's door) of the
    17
    speech deprives it of its public import. Public employees do not for-
    feit the protection of the Constitution's Free Speech Clause merely
    because they decide to express their views privately rather than pub-
    licly. Givhan v. Western Line Consol. Sch. Dist. , 
    439 U.S. 410
    , 413-
    14 (1979).
    In any event, the sheriff considered the letter a group effort by
    black officers, and indeed it was. Virtually all of the black officers in
    the department participated in the Association. They discussed the
    items covered in the letter at four meetings, and they sent the letter
    as a body to voice their concerns about what they considered discrim-
    ination. Thus, the letter was not the expression of a single disgruntled
    employee about a personal employment dispute. See 
    Connick, 461 U.S. at 148
    (noting, in reversed circumstances, that the communica-
    tion at issue "if released to the public would convey no information
    at all other than the fact that a single employee is upset with the status
    quo"). Instead, the letter here was delivered in the context or circum-
    stance of a group complaint, and that further demonstrates the public
    import of the speech. Collins v. Robinson, 
    568 F. Supp. 1464
    , 1468
    (E.D. Ark. 1983) (memorandum to sheriff for which sergeant was
    fired involved matters of public concern because, among other things,
    it expressed the complaints of numerous officers about the behavior
    of a major), aff'd on the reasoning of the district court, 
    734 F.2d 1321
    (8th Cir. 1984).
    In sum, we hold that in 1991 it was clearly established that the
    Association's letter, which Cromer adopted as his own speech,
    involved a matter of public concern.
    b.
    Because Cromer's speech involved a matter of public concern, we
    must now balance Cromer's interest as a citizen in commenting on
    racial discrimination in a law enforcement agency against Sheriff
    Brown's interest in maintaining an efficient workplace. 
    Pickering, 391 U.S. at 568
    . Interests of the community also weigh in the balance.
    Piver v. Pender County Bd. of Educ., 
    835 F.2d 1076
    , 1078 (4th Cir.
    1987), cert. denied, 
    487 U.S. 1206
    (1988) (noting that for speech to
    be constitutionally protected, "the interests of the speaker and the
    18
    community in the speech [must] outweigh the interests of the
    employer") (emphasis added).
    We have recently noted that "only infrequently will it be ``clearly
    established' that a public employee's speech on a matter of public
    concern is constitutionally protected, because the relevant inquiry
    requires a ``particularized balancing' that is subtle, difficult to apply
    and not yet well-defined." 
    DiMeglio, 45 F.3d at 806
    . But we did not
    say that a public employee's right to speak on matters of public con-
    cern could never be clearly established. We believe that Cromer's is
    one of the "infrequent" cases where an employee's right to speak on
    a matter of public concern was clearly established. 8
    i.
    We are persuaded that the interests to be balanced under Pickering
    weighed so heavily in Cromer's favor that his right to speak about
    perceived racial discrimination was clearly established in 1991.
    We begin our balancing analysis by examining the interests to be
    weighed on Cromer's side. We have already said that Cromer's
    _________________________________________________________________
    8 Other circuits have found First Amendment rights to be clearly estab-
    lished in certain cases, even under Pickering 's balancing test. See, e.g.,
    Kincade v. City of Blue Springs, 
    64 F.3d 389
    , 398-99 (8th Cir. 1995)
    (city engineer voiced safety concerns regarding a construction project),
    cert. denied, 
    116 S. Ct. 1565
    (1996); Lambert v. Richard, 
    59 F.3d 134
    ,
    137 (9th Cir.) (plaintiff criticized library director's mismanagement),
    cert. denied, 
    116 S. Ct. 673
    (1995); Ramirez v. Oklahoma Dep't of Men-
    tal Health, 
    41 F.3d 584
    , 593-95 (10th Cir. 1994) (plaintiffs complained
    of mistreatment of a mental patient); Williams v. Kentucky, 
    24 F.3d 1526
    ,
    1537 (6th Cir.) (plaintiff reported employer's illegal activities), cert.
    denied, 
    115 S. Ct. 358
    (1995); Bieluch v. Sullivan, 
    999 F.2d 666
    , 673 (2d
    Cir. 1993) (police officer headed groups which campaigned against a
    school construction proposal and a proposed town budget), cert. denied,
    
    114 S. Ct. 926
    (1994); Gorman v. Robinson, 
    977 F.2d 350
    , 356 (7th Cir.
    1992) (plaintiff informed FBI of his employer's wrongdoings); Stough v.
    Gallagher, 
    967 F.2d 1523
    , 1528-29 (11th Cir. 1992) (captain spoke in
    support of sheriff's political opponent); Brawner v. City of Richardson,
    Tex., 
    855 F.2d 187
    , 191 (5th Cir. 1988) (police officer made serious alle-
    gations of possible police misconduct).
    19
    speech (reporting widely-held views about racial discrimination in the
    sheriff's office) involved a matter of grave public concern. Indeed,
    "speech on public issues occupies the ``highest rung of the hierarchy
    of First Amendment values.'" 
    Connick, 461 U.S. at 145
    (citation
    omitted).
    We emphasize that this is not a "run-of-the-mine single plaintiff
    discrimination case." See Auriemma v. Rice , 
    910 F.2d 1449
    , 1460 (7th
    Cir. 1990) (en banc), cert. denied 
    501 U.S. 1204
    (1991). Although
    Cromer is the only plaintiff, the speech he adopted is a letter sent by
    a group of most of the 32 black officers who worked for Sheriff
    Brown. Cromer's speech, therefore, had the potential for "broad
    impact," 
    id., because public
    safety was put at risk by the group per-
    ception that black officers were discriminated against. In other words,
    the effectiveness of a major law enforcement agency was being called
    into question by a significant number of its members. The public has
    a fundamental interest in effective law enforcement organizations that
    are free of discrimination. Cromer's individual interests, then, merge
    in a real sense with those of the community at large. Those merged
    interests are substantial. "For a police force to be effective it must
    have the respect and support of the community as well as its officers;
    our system of government demands that support be garnered through
    informed evaluation of circumstance, and not through the suppression
    of dissent." 
    Leonard, 705 F.2d at 1305
    . Accordingly, the public has
    a keen interest in seeing that police officers are free to speak up about
    any broad-based discrimination in their agencies. After all,
    "[g]overnment employees are often in the best position to know what
    ails the agencies for which they work; public debate may gain much
    from their informed opinions." Waters v. Churchill, 
    114 S. Ct. 1878
    ,
    1887 (1994). These interests weigh heavily in Cromer's favor.
    We now weigh the interests of Sheriff Brown, "as an employer, in
    promoting the efficiency of the public services[the sheriff's office]
    performs through its employees." See 
    Pickering, 391 U.S. at 568
    . In
    weighing the sheriff's interests, we bear in mind that when the
    employer runs a law enforcement organization where"discipline is
    demanded," he has "greater latitude . . . in dealing with dissension in
    [the] ranks." Maciariello v. Sumner, 
    973 F.2d 295
    , 300 (4th Cir.
    1992), cert. denied, 
    506 U.S. 1080
    (1993).
    20
    Here, Sheriff Brown maintains that Cromer's speech carried the
    potential for disrupting efficiency because it cut against discipline,
    morale and good working relationships in the department. We exam-
    ine the extent to which Cromer's speech undermined these interests.
    We look preliminarily at Cromer's position and status when he
    engaged in the speech. Sheriff Brown charges that Cromer endorsed
    the grievances presented by the black officers' group and "did nothing
    to diffuse the tense racial situation presented by the formation of
    [that] group." Brief of Appellees at 23. The sheriff says that he looked
    to Cromer to maintain good race relations in the department. Thus,
    the sheriff maintains that Cromer could (and should) have spoken up
    at the black officers' meetings and allayed the concerns expressed by
    the Association. This might well be an accurate representation of
    what the sheriff expected of Cromer when he was a captain, but it sig-
    nificantly overstates Cromer's responsibility and influence after he
    was demoted from the command staff to lieutenant.
    Sheriff Brown testified that he demoted Cromer because he had
    "lost his ability and his effectiveness as commander of the uniform
    patrol" by supervising through use of intimidation and retaliation.
    According to the sheriff, Cromer had lost the respect of the lieuten-
    ants and sergeants he supervised. Cromer, for his part, believed he
    was demoted for racial reasons. After his demotion Cromer rarely saw
    the sheriff and did not participate in policymaking. Under these cir-
    cumstances it is not plausible that Sheriff Brown would have looked
    solely to the demoted Cromer to foster racial harmony. Nor could the
    sheriff have expected the demoted Cromer to argue that the depart-
    ment was free of racial discrimination, nor expected other black offi-
    cers to follow Cromer if he had said the charges in the letter were
    groundless.
    Nevertheless, Cromer was a lieutenant, and we must weigh how
    much his speech worked against the efficiency interests asserted by
    the sheriff: discipline, morale and good working relationships.
    As to discipline, the sheriff says that "Cromer never followed the
    chain of command in presenting the [black] officers' grievances."
    Brief of Appellees at 24. "Rather, he attended clandestine meetings
    and endorsed the sending of an anonymous letter." 
    Id. According to
    21
    Sheriff Brown, by not presenting the grievances in person to a supe-
    rior, Cromer undermined the authority of the command staff and the
    sheriff. The sheriff maintains that this lack of discipline made Cromer
    an "antagonist[ ]" who had to be "eradicate[d]." See 
    id. at 26.
    Sheriff Brown did have an interest in seeing that any grievance was
    channeled up through the chain of command under the name of the
    officer receiving it (or sending it along). Yet that interest in good dis-
    cipline must in turn be measured against what happened here. The
    black officers did not make their allegations of discrimination public.
    Instead, the letter was given only to Sheriff Brown, so that any devia-
    tion from good order and discipline was known only to him and the
    members of the Association. The letter was not insubordinate or
    rebellious in tone, and there was no public display of disobedience or
    protest. Moreover, although the letter was anonymous in the sense
    that no one signed it, it was clear that virtually all black officers were
    behind it. And it goes without saying that Sheriff Brown knew who
    the black officers were.
    To sum up on the discipline interest: we give some weight to Sher-
    iff Brown on this point. We do not, however, give him any great
    weight because the black officers moved quietly and did not try to
    provoke a public confrontation.
    On morale, Sheriff Brown says that Cromer harmed morale by
    joining in a letter containing grievances that Cromer knew were
    groundless. We recognize the importance of good morale in a law
    enforcement organization. Yet here we do not see how Cromer's par-
    ticipation in the speech could have done much to lower the morale of
    black officers. The fact that meetings were held and the letter was
    written indicates that their morale was already low. Moreover, when
    we consider how the demoted Cromer was regarded (according to the
    sheriff, Cromer had lost the ability to lead and lost the respect of the
    officers he had supervised as captain), we do not see how Cromer
    could have done much to lift morale even if he had spoken up in
    defense of the sheriff. We give Sheriff Brown very little weight on the
    interest in good morale.
    We turn last to the sheriff's interest in maintaining good working
    relationships. Specifically, Sheriff Brown says that his close working
    22
    relationship with Cromer was destroyed when Cromer endorsed the
    Association's letter. When Cromer was one of four captains on the
    six-person command staff, we have no doubt that the sheriff and Cro-
    mer had a close working relationship. That relationship ended, how-
    ever, when Cromer was demoted. After his demotion Cromer did not
    work directly with the sheriff and rarely saw him. We give no weight
    to the sheriff on this point.
    As we stand back and look, the scales weigh heavily in Cromer's
    favor. His interest in speaking about the widespread (internal) percep-
    tion of racial discrimination in a law enforcement agency must be
    given great weight. And the community at large shares in that interest.
    We have, of course, taken care to weigh the efficiency interests
    advanced by the sheriff -- discipline, morale and good working rela-
    tionships. Given Cromer's demotion and diminished status, however,
    his speech had little or no impact on those interests, and we therefore
    accord them little or no weight in this case. The balancing test clearly
    establishes that Cromer's speech was protected.
    ii.
    Our conclusion is buttressed by the fact that, at the time Sheriff
    Brown fired Cromer, existing decisions in our sister circuits had given
    First Amendment protection to speech like Cromer's, that is, a police
    officer's expressions of concern about racial discrimination and ani-
    mus in his agency.9
    The most strikingly similar prior case is Leonard v. City of
    Columbus, 
    705 F.2d 1299
    (11th Cir. 1983), cert. denied, 
    468 U.S. 1204
    (1984). Leonard involved members of the Columbus, Georgia,
    police department who in 1971 formed the Afro-American Patrol-
    men's League. The officers formed the League as a vehicle to criti-
    cize department practices which they viewed as discriminatory. In
    particular, the League's members complained that black officers were
    being discriminated against in hiring and promotion, shift assignment,
    _________________________________________________________________
    9 In deciding whether Cromer is asserting a clearly established right, we
    may examine the pre-existing law outside this circuit. See 
    Pinder, 54 F.3d at 1176-1178
    (canvassing decisions outside the Fourth Circuit in a
    qualified immunity case).
    23
    and discipline and alleged that black citizens were subjected to police
    brutality. League members initially complained to the city's Board of
    Public Safety, but members felt that this resulted in no progress.
    Thereafter, the League issued a press release and held a press confer-
    ence to publicize its criticism of the police department. Three days
    after the press conference a black officer, who had called in sick, was
    disciplined with the extraordinary measure of arrest for contempt of
    court for missing a scheduled court appearance. League members
    responded with two days of peaceful picketing at the police station.
    On the second day of the protest, the Deputy Chief of Police started
    suspension proceedings against three policemen who were League
    officials. On the third day, with the press present, seven picketing
    black officers assisted one another in removing the American flag
    emblem from the sleeves of their uniforms. Later that day, the Chief
    of Police held a press conference to announce the firing of all protest-
    ing officers. The chief publicly accused the officers of making "base-
    less allegations of unlawful conduct, racism, and discrimination." 
    Id. at 1301.
    The fired officers sued, and the district court determined that
    their dismissal did not violate the First Amendment. But on appeal the
    Eleventh Circuit determined that the protesting officers' speech was
    protected under Pickering's balancing test. 
    Id. at 1304-06.
    Cromer's case is indistinguishable from Leonard in several rele-
    vant respects. First, like the officers in Leonard, Cromer spoke
    through an association of black officers formed in response to per-
    ceived racism in their law enforcement agency. Second, the majority
    of the complaints voiced by Cromer's Association were identical to
    those made by the League in Leonard. Cromer's Association alleged
    discrimination against black officers in recruitment, promotion, cross-
    training and transfer, and equipment. The League in Leonard alleged
    discrimination in hiring and promotion, shift assignment and disci-
    pline. Finally, the reaction of the sheriff in Cromer's case was the
    same as that of the police chief in Leonard: both officials felt that the
    allegations of the black officers were baseless and fired those they
    regarded as the main culprits.10
    _________________________________________________________________
    10 The cases do differ as to the methods used by the officers to convey
    their speech. The officers in Leonard, after an initial effort to deal with
    the Board of Public Safety, resorted to press conferences, picket lines
    24
    Leonard, on facts quite similar to Cromer's, recognized that the
    fired officers had "sought [through their speech] to emphasize a
    widely-held perception of racially discriminatory practices in the City
    of Columbus Police force." 
    Id. at 1305.
    This speech, about a matter
    "vital to the public interest," deserved constitutional protection. 
    Id. at 1304-05.
    And Leonard bluntly warned officials not to try to suppress
    such speech:
    For a police force to be effective it must have the respect
    and support of the community as well as its officers; our
    system of government demands that support be garnered
    through informed evaluation of circumstance, and not
    through the suppression of dissent . . . . [A] police officer
    does not receive a "watered-down version" of constitution-
    ally protected rights by virtue of his employment on the
    police force.
    
    Id. at 1305
    (citations omitted).
    In addition to Leonard, other decisions in our sister circuits made
    plain that the First Amendment does not allow state officials to take
    adverse employment action against an employee who speaks out
    about the practice of racial discrimination in a law enforcement
    agency. See Rode, 
    845 F.2d 1195
    (First Amendment protected state
    police civilian employee whose speech involved a matter of grave
    public concern, racial animus within state police); Auriemma, 
    910 F.2d 1449
    (First Amendment protected white officers' right to com-
    plain in federal court about alleged racial discrimination in depart-
    ment reorganization); see also Bridgeport Guardians, Inc. v.
    Delmonte, 
    553 F. Supp. 601
    (D. Conn. 1982) (enjoining police
    department from taking adverse employment actions against members
    _________________________________________________________________
    and symbolic acts of disobedience. In Cromer's case the officers com-
    plained privately. Thus, the speech of the officers in Leonard was far
    more detrimental than was Cromer's to the state's interest in discipline
    or efficiency. Yet the court of appeals in Leonard concluded that the dis-
    obedient speech in that case was protected under the Pickering balancing
    test.
    25
    of police officers' organization opposing racially discriminatory prac-
    tices of department).
    Leonard and the similar authority that existed at the time of Cro-
    mer's termination bolster our holding that Cromer's First Amendment
    right to voice his concern about racial discrimination in his law
    enforcement agency was clearly established in June of 1991.11
    c.
    At this point in the analysis, all that remains is Harlow's reason-
    ableness inquiry. 
    Harlow, 457 U.S. at 818
    (immunity shields officials
    "insofar as their conduct does not violate clearly established rights of
    which a reasonable person would have known"). We ask whether an
    objectively reasonable official in Sheriff Brown's position would
    have known that he could not fire Cromer for participating in the
    Association's complaint about racial discrimination in the workplace.
    
    Pinder, 54 F.3d at 1173
    . "If the law was clearly established, the
    immunity defense ordinarily should fail, since a reasonably competent
    _________________________________________________________________
    11 We pause to point out that our holding is a narrow one. It is the infre-
    quent Connick claim that will survive a qualified immunity defense. See
    
    DiMeglio, 45 F.3d at 806
    . Thus, we are not holding that any time a pub-
    lic official fires or otherwise disciplines an employee who has com-
    plained of discrimination, the official has to go to trial. Rather, this is the
    infrequent case where, after the Pickering balancing, the employee had
    the right to speak as a citizen about extensive and specific claims of
    racial discrimination. This case is quite different from one where "a pub-
    lic employee speaks not as a citizen upon matters of public concern, but
    instead as an employee upon matters only of personal interest." 
    Connick, 138 U.S. at 147
    . Here, Cromer joined about thirty other black officers to
    complain that the effectiveness of the sheriff's office as a law enforce-
    ment agency was being jeopardized by the following examples of racial
    discrimination: ineffective minority recruitment, lack of opportunity for
    black officers to work in prestigious units, lack of promotional opportu-
    nities for black officers, internal investigation practices that pitted white
    officers against black officers, and favoritism to white officers in the
    allocation of new equipment. These charges were specific enough and
    serious enough to give the community at large an interest in the matter.
    And they were presented in a non-confrontational way that did not appre-
    ciably affect the sheriff's efficiency interests.
    26
    public official should know the law governing his conduct." 
    Harlow, 457 U.S. at 800
    . Accord 
    DiMeglio, 45 F.3d at 794-95
    n.1.
    Because the Pickering balancing test tips decidedly in Cromer's
    favor and because caselaw had confirmed his right to speak, we hold
    that any reasonable official in Sheriff Brown's shoes would have real-
    ized he would violate the Constitution if he fired Cromer for speaking
    of widely held concerns about racial discrimination in the sheriff's
    office. Accordingly, we reverse the district court's ruling that Sheriff
    Brown was entitled to qualified immunity with respect to Cromer's
    free speech claim.
    2.
    Cromer's second constitutional claim is that Sheriff Brown violated
    his right of association by firing him for participating in the black
    officers' Association. Again, Sheriff Brown defends himself on
    grounds that Cromer's associational rights were not clearly estab-
    lished in June of 1991. The parties and the court below treated the
    association and speech claims as inseparable. That approach is logical
    in this case because the Association existed solely to convey the black
    officers' complaints about racial discrimination.
    The right to associate in order to express one's views is "insepara-
    ble" from the right to speak freely. Thomas v. Collins, 
    323 U.S. 516
    ,
    530 (1945); Shelton v. Tucker, 
    364 U.S. 479
    , 486 (1960) (the "right
    of free association [is] a right closely allied to freedom of speech and
    a right which, like free speech, lies at the foundation of a free soci-
    ety"). The Supreme Court has explained that:
    An individual's freedom to speak, to worship, and to peti-
    tion the Government for the redress of grievances could not
    be vigorously protected from interference by the State
    unless a correlative freedom to engage in group effort
    toward those ends were not also guaranteed . . . . Conse-
    quently, we have long understood as implicit in the right to
    engage in activities protected by the First Amendment a cor-
    responding right to associate with others in pursuit of a wide
    variety of political, social, economic, educational, religious,
    and cultural ends.
    27
    Roberts v. U.S. Jaycees, 
    468 U.S. 609
    , 622 (1984) (citations omitted).
    Accordingly, since Cromer's personal right to speak about allegations
    of racial discrimination within his agency was clearly established in
    1991, we hold that his "correlative freedom to engage in group effort
    toward those [same] ends" was likewise clearly established. Since
    Cromer had the clear right to speak as part of the Association, he also
    had a clear right to participate in the Association. See N.A.A.C.P. v.
    Alabama ex rel. Patterson, 
    357 U.S. 449
    , 460 (1958) ("It is beyond
    debate that freedom to engage in association for the advancement of
    beliefs and ideas is an inseparable aspect of the``liberty' assured by
    the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment which
    embraces freedom of speech."); Wilton v. Mayor and City Council of
    Baltimore, 
    772 F.2d 88
    , 91 (4th Cir. 1985) (noting that the limitations
    on a public employee's right to associate are "closely analogous" to
    the limitations on his right to speak).
    Given these principles, we find that any objectively reasonable per-
    son in Sheriff Brown's shoes (in June of 1991) would have realized
    that he would violate Cromer's constitutional rights if he fired him for
    participating in the Association. See, e.g., Marshall v. Allen, 
    984 F.2d 787
    , 799 (7th Cir. 1993) (holding that, in 1988, it was clearly estab-
    lished that freedom of association protected employee from being
    fired for associating with co-workers who filed a civil rights action
    against their agency).
    We therefore reverse the district court's determination that Sheriff
    Brown was entitled to qualified immunity from Cromer's free associ-
    ation claim.
    IV.
    Last, we turn briefly to the district court's determination that Cro-
    mer cannot pursue his § 1983 claims against Sheriff Brown in his
    official capacity. The Eleventh Amendment bars suits in federal
    courts for money damages against an "unconsenting State." Edelman
    v. Jordan, 
    415 U.S. 651
    , 663 (1974). This immunity extends to
    "arm[s] of the State," Mt. Healthy City Sch. Dist. Bd. of Educ. v.
    Doyle, 
    429 U.S. 274
    , 280 (1977), including state agencies and state
    officers acting in their official capacity. Gray v. Laws, 
    51 F.3d 426
    ,
    430 (4th Cir. 1995). The "largely, if not wholly, dispositive" factor in
    28
    determining whether an entity is properly characterized as an arm of
    the state is whether the state treasury will be liable for the judgment.
    
    Id. at 433;
    see also Bockes v. Fields, 
    999 F.2d 788
    , 790-91 (4th Cir.
    1993), cert. denied, 
    114 S. Ct. 992
    (1994). If the state's treasury will
    not be affected by the judgment, we consider other factors, "chief
    among which are whether the suit will jeopardize``the integrity
    retained by [the] State in our federal system' and whether the state
    possesses such control over the entity claiming Eleventh Amendment
    immunity that it can legitimately be considered an``arm of the state.'"
    
    Gray, 51 F.3d at 434
    (quoting Hess v. Port Auth. Trans-Hudson
    Corp., 
    115 S. Ct. 394
    , 400 (1994)) (internal citation omitted).
    Judgments against the Greenville County Sheriff are paid by the
    South Carolina State Insurance Reserve Fund. However, we are
    unable to discern from the record in this case whether the state pays
    any premiums on behalf of Greenville County. See Nelson v. Strawn,
    
    897 F. Supp. 252
    , 257-58 (D.S.C. 1995) (noting the same difficulty
    when presented with a similar question), aff'd in part, vacated in part
    on other grounds, 
    78 F.3d 579
    (1996). Compare 
    Bockes, 999 F.2d at 790
    (record demonstrated that state paid 80 percent of premiums on
    behalf of the subscribing agencies). Thus, it is unclear whether the
    state treasury would be partially liable for a judgment in this case.
    However, we have considered the remaining factors relevant to the
    immunity analysis and conclude that, in his official capacity, Sheriff
    Brown is an arm of the state. See Gulledge v. Smart, 
    691 F. Supp. 947
    (D.S.C. 1988) (holding that South Carolina sheriffs are state officials
    for Eleventh Amendment purposes), aff'd mem., 
    878 F.2d 379
    (4th
    Cir. 1989). Thus, we affirm the district court's conclusion that, in his
    capacity as a state official, Sheriff Brown is immune from suit under
    § 1983 for money damages.
    However, to the extent Cromer sought injunctive relief (e.g., rein-
    statement) against Sheriff Brown in his official capacity, the district
    court should not have granted summary judgment to Sheriff Brown.
    Eleventh Amendment immunity does not protect state officials in
    their official capacities from § 1983 claims for injunctive relief. Will
    v. Michigan Dep't of State Police, 
    491 U.S. 58
    , 71 n.10 (1989).
    Therefore, we reverse the district court's dismissal of Cromer's
    § 1983 claims against Sheriff Brown in his official capacity insofar as
    they request injunctive relief.
    29
    V.
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm in part, reverse in part, and
    remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED
    30
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 94-1403

Judges: Russell, Michael, Messitte

Filed Date: 7/15/1996

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/5/2024

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