Clyde Spencer v. Sharon Krause ( 2017 )


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  •                 FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    CLYDE RAYMOND SPENCER,                   Nos. 14-35689
    Plaintiff-Appellant/                14-35737
    Cross-Appellee,
    D.C. No.
    v.                   3:11-cv-05424-BHS
    JAMES M. PETERS,
    Defendant,          OPINION
    and
    SHARON KRAUSE, Detective
    (Clark County); MICHAEL
    DAVIDSON, Sergeant (Clark
    County),
    Defendants-Appellees/
    Cross-Appellants.
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the Western District of Washington
    Benjamin H. Settle, District Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted March 9, 2017
    Seattle, Washington
    Filed May 18, 2017
    2                       SPENCER V. KRAUSE
    Before: Susan P. Graber, Sandra S. Ikuta,
    and Andrew D. Hurwitz, Circuit Judges.
    Opinion by Judge Graber
    SUMMARY*
    Civil Rights
    The panel reversed the district court’s judgment as a
    matter of law and remanded with instructions to reinstate a
    jury verdict in a 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
     action in which plaintiff
    alleged that a Clark County detective deliberately fabricated
    evidence against him and continued her criminal investigation
    despite knowing that plaintiff was innocent.
    Plaintiff alleged that defendant deliberately
    mischaracterized witness statements in her investigative
    reports. As a result, plaintiff testified that he entered a plea
    pursuant to Carolina v. Alford, 
    500 U.S. 25
    , 37–38 (1970),
    causing him to spend nearly twenty years in prison. A jury
    found for plaintiff, but the district court granted judgment as
    a matter of law to defendants on the grounds that plaintiff
    failed to introduce evidence that defendant knew or should
    have known of plaintiff’s innocence.
    The panel held that because plaintiff introduced direct
    evidence of fabrication, he did not have to prove that
    defendant knew or should have known he was innocent.
    *
    This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
    been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
    SPENCER V. KRAUSE                        3
    Addressing defendant’s cross-appeal, the panel held that
    ample evidence in the record supported the jury’s finding on
    causation and given the jury’s finding on causation and all
    other elements, the district court did not err by not separately
    instructing the jury on “but for” causation and “proximate”
    causation. The panel further held that the district court did
    not err by declining to instruct the jury that plaintiff was
    required to prove, that setting aside the fabricated evidence,
    probable cause was lacking. Finally, the panel held that the
    district court did not err by giving a deliberate indifference
    instruction and by permitting plaintiff to introduce certain
    evidence.
    COUNSEL
    Kathleen Zellner (argued), Kathleen T. Zellner & Associates
    P.C., Downers Grove, Illinois, for Plaintiff-Appellant/Cross-
    Appellee.
    Jeffrey A.O. Freimund (argued), Freimund Jackson & Tardif
    PLLC, Olympia, Washington, for Defendant-Appellee/Cross-
    Appellant Michael Davidson.
    Guy M. Bogdanovich (argued), Law Lyman Daniel
    Kamerrer & Bogdanovich, Olympia, Washington, for
    Defendant-Appellee/Cross-Appellant Sharon Krause.
    4                   SPENCER V. KRAUSE
    OPINION
    GRABER, Circuit Judge:
    The Fourteenth Amendment prohibits the deliberate
    fabrication of evidence by a state official. Devereaux v.
    Abbey, 
    263 F.3d 1070
    , 1074–75 (9th Cir. 2001) (en banc).
    Deliberate fabrication can be established by circumstantial
    evidence. For example, evidence that officials “continued
    their investigation of [a person] despite the fact that they
    knew or should have known that he was innocent, 
    id. at 1076
    ,
    can raise the inference that the investigator has an “unlawful
    motivation” to frame an innocent person. Costanich v. Dep’t
    of Soc. & Health Servs., 
    627 F.3d 1101
    , 1111 (9th Cir. 2010).
    Or deliberate fabrication can be shown by direct evidence, for
    example, when “an interviewer . . . deliberately
    mischaracterizes witness statements in her investigative
    report.” 
    Id.
     In cases involving direct evidence, the
    investigator’s knowledge or reason to know of the plaintiff’s
    innocence need not be proved. 
    Id.
    In this 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
     action, Plaintiff Clyde Raymond
    Spencer introduced direct evidence of deliberate fabrication,
    specifically, evidence that Clark County Sheriff’s Office
    Detective Sharon Krause deliberately mischaracterized
    witnesses’ statements in her investigative reports. A jury
    found for Plaintiff and against Defendants Krause and
    Sergeant Michael Davidson, Krause’s supervisor. But the
    district court granted judgment as a matter of law to
    Defendants, on the ground that Plaintiff had failed to
    introduce evidence that Krause knew or should have known
    of Plaintiff’s innocence.       Because the district court
    misunderstood our precedent, and because Defendants’ other
    challenges to the jury’s verdict fail, we reverse and remand
    SPENCER V. KRAUSE                                5
    with instructions to enter judgment for Plaintiff consistent
    with the jury’s verdict.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY1
    Plaintiff and his first wife, DeAnne Spencer, had two
    children, Matthew and Kathryn. After a divorce, DeAnne
    retained primary custody of the children in Sacramento,
    California, and the children visited Plaintiff several times a
    year near Vancouver, Washington.
    After Plaintiff and DeAnne separated, Plaintiff lived with
    Karen Stone for about two years. Matthew and Kathryn
    visited Plaintiff for extended periods during that time, and
    they got to know Stone. In 1983, Plaintiff married his second
    wife, Shirley Spencer. Shirley’s son from a previous
    relationship, Matthew Hansen (“Hansen”), therefore became
    Plaintiff’s stepson. Plaintiff, Shirley, and Hansen lived
    together in the Vancouver area.
    In the summer of 1984, Matthew and Kathryn visited
    Plaintiff for a six-week stay ending on Sunday, August 26,
    1984. Matthew was 8; Kathryn was 5; and Hansen was 4.
    On the final weekend of the stay, Kathryn allegedly disclosed
    to Shirley that she had been sexually abused, including acts
    of vaginal and oral sex, by four people: her father (Plaintiff),
    her mother (DeAnne), her father’s previous girlfriend (Stone),
    and her eight-year-old brother (Matthew). Alarmed, Plaintiff
    1
    Because we are reviewing the district court’s judgment as a matter
    of law following a verdict in favor of Plaintiff, we must view the evidence
    in the light most favorable to Plaintiff, and we must draw all reasonable
    inferences in his favor. Oracle Corp v. SAP AG, 
    765 F.3d 1081
    , 1086 (9th
    Cir. 2014).
    6                    SPENCER V. KRAUSE
    and Shirley reported Kathryn’s statements to Child Protective
    Services.    Investigations began in California and in
    Washington.
    Sacramento Detective Pat Flood contacted Plaintiff and
    Shirley, who recounted Kathryn’s statements. Detective
    Flood then visited DeAnne, who denied any sexual abuse and
    any knowledge of the allegations against others. She later
    passed a polygraph examination, and Detective Flood
    terminated the investigation of DeAnne.
    Detective Flood also talked with Matthew and Kathryn,
    who had recently returned from Vancouver. Matthew denied
    any knowledge of the allegations and denied any sexual
    abuse. Kathryn was “extremely shy,” according to Detective
    Flood’s contemporaneous report. (Detective Flood died
    before the trial in this case and therefore did not testify.) The
    report stated that Kathryn “indicated that she did tell Shirley
    everything that Shirley advised me of but then when asked to
    explain it or asked specific questions about it, she would say
    that she couldn’t remember the words so she couldn’t tell
    me.” Kathryn gave conflicting responses to questions asking
    whether anyone had touched her inappropriately. DeAnne
    took Kathryn for a medical exam; the examining doctor found
    no physical evidence of sexual abuse.
    In Washington, Krause investigated Stone (Plaintiff’s
    former girlfriend) and Plaintiff. Stone denied ever abusing
    Kathryn, and she agreed to take a polygraph test. Although
    Krause made eight attempts to schedule a polygraph test,
    Stone never took one. Krause nevertheless ended the
    investigation of Stone in December 1984.
    SPENCER V. KRAUSE                               7
    Plaintiff, too, denied abusing Kathryn, and he also agreed
    to take a polygraph test. On September 21, 1984,
    Plaintiff—accompanied by Shirley—took a polygraph test at
    the Sheriff’s Office.2 The results of the polygraph were
    inconclusive, so Plaintiff agreed to a second polygraph test a
    few days later. The examiner’s report of the results of the
    second test suggested deception, but not very strongly:
    The subject demonstrated consistently greater
    physiologic responses on the three critical
    questions . . . as compared to the control
    items. While this was sufficient to be
    indicative of deception, . . . Spencer’s scores
    were not very high so that the examiner does
    not feel as certain about the validity of these
    findings as in most examinations. Hopefully,
    further corroboration of these results will be
    obtained.
    In mid-October 1984, Krause traveled to Sacramento to
    continue the investigation. During that trip, she interviewed
    Matthew, DeAnne, two of DeAnne’s sisters, and DeAnne’s
    mother, all of whom denied any knowledge of sexual abuse
    2
    Sergeant Davidson was present, and Shirley met him for the first
    time. Plaintiff’s theory at trial was that Davidson was immediately
    attracted to Shirley, which may have motivated Davidson to be less than
    scrupulous—or outright unethical—when it came to the investigation of
    Plaintiff’s actions. For example, it was undisputed that Shirley and
    Plaintiff separated during the investigation; that Shirley and Davidson
    moved in together very shortly after Plaintiff was sentenced; and that
    Shirley and Davidson lived together for about five years. Similarly,
    Plaintiff introduced evidence that Davidson improperly visited Plaintiff
    while he was in jail pending trial and that, during those visits, Davidson
    pressured Plaintiff to sign a quitclaim deed to Shirley’s benefit.
    8                   SPENCER V. KRAUSE
    of Kathryn by anyone. Krause prepared investigative reports
    of those interviews, including a report attributing many
    quotations to Matthew. During the trial in this case, Matthew
    testified that many of those quotations were fabricated—in
    particular, statements that incorrectly portrayed Matthew as
    comfortable with Krause and incorrectly portrayed Matthew
    as generally aware of the allegations of sexual abuse.
    Krause also interviewed Kathryn twice. The interviews
    took place almost entirely in Krause’s motel room and her
    rental car, without anyone else present.            Krause’s
    contemporaneous investigative reports claim that Kathryn
    described, in great detail, sexual abuse by Plaintiff. The
    reports contain scores of specific, explicit quotations
    attributed to Kathryn. At trial, however, Kathryn testified
    that, other than some trivial quotations unrelated to sexual
    abuse, all the quotations were fabrications. Kathryn testified
    that, in fact, she denied to Krause that anyone had sexually
    abused her.
    In late November 1984, a prosecutor from King County,
    Washington, reviewed the investigative file at the request of
    the Clark County Sheriff’s Office. The prosecutor concluded
    that the case was “legally insufficient” for several reasons.
    First, Kathryn appeared to be “extremely reluctant to talk
    about facts,” and Kathryn’s failure to disclose the abuse to
    her counselor did “not bode well for testifying in court.”
    Second, the fact that Kathryn identified “multiple suspects is
    very disturbing,” because it suggested a lack of credibility.
    Third, there were inconsistencies “over all issues”: the
    number of times abuse occurred, what Plaintiff was wearing,
    and what Kathryn was wearing. Fourth, certain details
    commonly reported by victims of sexual abuse were lacking
    from Kathryn’s account.
    SPENCER V. KRAUSE                        9
    In early December 1984, a Clark County prosecutor, Jim
    Peters, conducted a videotaped interview of Kathryn.
    According to Peters, the purpose was to find out “whether she
    could tell me the story of what happened and whether I
    thought she might be competent”; it was not an investigative
    interview. For that reason, Peters was not concerned about
    using techniques—such as coaching or suggestive
    questioning—that would be improper if used during an
    investigation.
    On the videotape, which was played for the jury, Kathryn
    appeared very uncomfortable during the entire 45-minute
    initial interview. Very early on, she asked Krause to leave
    the room, even though Krause’s investigative reports
    portrayed Kathryn as extremely comfortable with her.
    Kathryn was unable to describe Plaintiff’s alleged
    conduct—until after an hour-long break. After the break, in
    a 10-minute follow-up interview, Kathryn described various
    acts of sexual abuse by Plaintiff. Kathryn testified at trial in
    this case that, during the break, she had been coached about
    what to say and that she went along with describing acts of
    sexual abuse just so that the distressing interview would end.
    Throughout the interview, Kathryn appeared eager to
    leave. Peters began the post-break interview by stating,
    “while the camera was off, [Kathryn] showed me something
    with the dolls, didn’t you?” After some coaxing, Kathryn
    demonstrated, using two anatomically correct dolls, two acts
    of sexual abuse. Peters then asked, “anything else?” to which
    Kathryn responded, “I forgot the last thing.” Peters later told
    his supervisor, in essence, that “I wouldn’t charge [the case]
    and I don’t want my name on the charging document.”
    10                  SPENCER V. KRAUSE
    On January 2, 1985, the prosecutor’s office nevertheless
    charged Plaintiff with two counts of sexually abusing
    Kathryn. Plaintiff pleaded not guilty and was released.
    By February 1985, Plaintiff and Shirley had separated,
    and Plaintiff was living at a motel. On February 16, Shirley
    dropped off four-year-old Hansen (Plaintiff’s stepson) to
    spend the night with Plaintiff at the motel. Plaintiff’s lawyer
    described this incident to the jury as a “set up.” Counsel
    argued that Shirley would not have dropped off her own four-
    year-old son had she believed that Plaintiff was a child rapist
    and that the incident gave Krause an opportunity to cure the
    defects in the case that the earlier prosecutors had noted. For
    example, Krause reported that Hansen described certain
    details that one of the prosecutors had identified as
    conspicuously missing from Kathryn’s account of sexual
    abuse.
    After the night at the motel, Krause interviewed Hansen.
    According to the investigative report, Hansen told Krause that
    Plaintiff sexually abused him on that night, including having
    anal sex with him. Officers arrested Plaintiff. In a follow-up
    interview, Hansen recalled molestation by Plaintiff during the
    summer of 1984 of all three children—him, Matthew, and
    Kathryn. (Unlike Matthew and Kathryn, Hansen testified at
    trial that Plaintiff did, in fact, abuse him.)
    Krause then re-interviewed Kathryn and Matthew
    separately and prepared further investigative reports.
    According to those reports, both children described, in detail,
    sexual abuse by Plaintiff of all three children. As with the
    earlier reports, both Kathryn and Matthew testified at trial
    that many of the quotations attributed to them were
    fabricated.
    SPENCER V. KRAUSE                       11
    On May 3, 1985, the prosecutor charged Plaintiff with
    statutory rape of all three children. On May 16, 1985,
    Plaintiff pleaded guilty pursuant to North Carolina v. Alford,
    
    400 U.S. 25
    , 37–38 (1970). An “Alford plea” allows a
    defendant to maintain his innocence but to plead guilty in the
    face of apparent evidence of his guilt. Plaintiff’s theory at
    trial was that he entered an Alford plea because of the
    extensive fabricated evidence.         Plaintiff has always
    maintained his innocence.
    The state court sentenced Plaintiff to two life terms plus
    171 months. In 2004, the Governor of Washington
    commuted his sentence to community supervision. In 2009,
    the state courts allowed Plaintiff to withdraw his Alford plea.
    In 2010, the prosecutor dismissed all charges against
    Plaintiff.
    In 2011, Plaintiff brought this civil action, which was
    tried to a jury on three claims: (1) a violation of the
    Fourteenth Amendment by Defendant Krause for deliberate
    fabrication of evidence; (2) respondeat superior liability for
    Defendant Davidson; and (3) conspiracy by Defendants
    Krause and Davidson to fabricate evidence deliberately. The
    district court instructed the jury that, in order to find for
    Plaintiff on the substantive deliberate-fabrication claim, the
    jury must find that:
    1.     Defendant Krause deliberately
    fabricated evidence against plaintiff;
    2. Defendant Krause acted with deliberate
    indifference toward the constitutional right of
    plaintiff;
    12                       SPENCER V. KRAUSE
    3. Defendant Krause continued her
    investigation of plaintiff despite the fact that
    she knew or should have known that plaintiff
    was innocent of the charges stemming from
    that evidence;
    4. The criminal charges filed against
    plaintiff were based on that evidence;
    5. Plaintiff suffered injury as a result of
    that evidence; and
    6. That evidence was so closely related to
    the deprivation of plaintiff’s right as to be the
    moving force that caused the ultimate injury.
    The jury returned a verdict for Plaintiff on the two
    substantive claims and a verdict for Defendants on the
    conspiracy claim. The jury awarded $9 million in damages.
    After trial, the district court granted judgment as a matter of
    law to Defendants on the ground that Plaintiff had introduced
    insufficient evidence to prove that Krause knew or should
    have known that Plaintiff was innocent.
    Plaintiff timely appeals. Defendants timely cross-appeal.3
    3
    The cross-appeal advances only alternative arguments in support of
    the judgment. Accordingly, a cross-appeal was unnecessary. See, e.g., El
    Paso Nat. Gas Co. v. Neztsosie, 
    526 U.S. 473
    , 479 (1999) (“Absent a
    cross-appeal, an appellee may urge in support of a decree any matter
    appearing in the record . . . .” (internal quotation marks omitted)); Rivero
    v. City of San Francisco, 
    316 F.3d 857
    , 862 (9th Cir. 2002) (“Prevailing
    parties need not have filed cross-appeals in order to correct errors in the
    district court’s reasoning nor to preserve alternative grounds for affirming
    the judgment.” (internal quotation marks and alterations omitted)).
    SPENCER V. KRAUSE                              13
    STANDARDS OF REVIEW
    We review de novo a judgment as a matter of law.
    Velazquez v. City of Long Beach, 
    793 F.3d 1010
    , 1017 (9th
    Cir. 2015).
    We review a district court’s formulation
    of civil jury instructions for an abuse of
    discretion, but we consider de novo whether
    the challenged instruction correctly states the
    law. “Jury instructions must be supported by
    the evidence, fairly and adequately cover the
    issues presented, correctly state the law, and
    not be misleading.” Peralta v. Dillard, 
    744 F.3d 1076
    , 1082 (9th Cir. 2014) (en banc).
    But if any error relating to the jury
    instructions was harmless, we do not reverse.
    “In evaluating jury instructions, prejudicial
    error results when, looking to the instructions
    as a whole, the substance of the applicable
    law was not fairly and correctly covered.
    Harmless error review for a civil jury trial
    shifts the burden to the defendant to
    Nonetheless, “[a] protective cross-appeal is permissible once an initial
    appeal is filed.” Warfield v. Alaniz, 
    569 F.3d 1015
    , 1019 n.3 (9th Cir.
    2009). We treat Defendants’ arguments on cross-appeal as alternative
    arguments to affirm the judgment. See Stormans, Inc. v. Wiesman,
    
    794 F.3d 1064
    , 1085 (9th Cir. 2015) (“Because the cross-appeal
    requirement is a rule of practice and not a jurisdictional bar, an appellate
    court has broad power to make such dispositions as justice requires.”
    (internal quotation marks omitted)), cert. denied, 
    136 S. Ct. 2433
     (2016);
    see also Shepard v. Quillen, 
    840 F.3d 686
    , 693 (9th Cir. 2016) (“We can
    affirm on any ground supported by the record.” (internal quotation marks
    omitted)).
    14                   SPENCER V. KRAUSE
    demonstrate that it is more probable than not
    that the jury would have reached the same
    verdict had it been properly instructed.”
    Gantt v. City of L.A., 
    717 F.3d 702
    , 707 (9th
    Cir. 2013).
    Wilkerson v. Wheeler, 
    772 F.3d 834
    , 838 (9th Cir. 2014)
    (alterations omitted).
    We review for abuse of discretion the district court’s
    admission of evidence. McEuin v. Crown Equip. Corp.,
    
    328 F.3d 1028
    , 1032 (9th Cir. 2003).
    DISCUSSION
    To prevail on a § 1983 claim of deliberate fabrication, a
    plaintiff must prove that (1) the defendant official
    deliberately fabricated evidence and (2) the deliberate
    fabrication caused the plaintiff’s deprivation of liberty.
    Costanich, 
    627 F.3d at 1111
    . To establish the second element
    of causation, the plaintiff must show that (a) the act was the
    cause in fact of the deprivation of liberty, meaning that the
    injury would not have occurred in the absence of the conduct;
    and (b) the act was the “proximate cause” or “legal cause” of
    the injury, meaning that the injury is of a type that a
    reasonable person would see as a likely result of the conduct
    in question. Whitlock v. Brueggemann, 
    682 F.3d 567
    , 582–83
    (7th Cir. 2012).
    A. Deliberate Fabrication
    Plaintiff argues that the district court incorrectly granted
    judgment as a matter of law to Defendants. “[W]hen
    reviewing a motion for judgment as a matter of law, we apply
    SPENCER V. KRAUSE                       15
    the law as it should be, rather than the law as it was read to
    the jury.” Pincay v. Andrews, 
    238 F.3d 1106
    , 1109 n.4 (9th
    Cir. 2001); accord Fisher v. City of San Jose, 
    558 F.3d 1069
    ,
    1074 (9th Cir. 2009) (en banc); cf. Musacchio v. United
    States, 
    136 S. Ct. 709
    , 715 (2016) (“All that a [criminal]
    defendant is entitled to on a sufficiency challenge is for the
    court to make a ‘legal’ determination whether the evidence
    was strong enough to reach a jury at all.”).
    As we explained in Costanich, 
    627 F.3d at 1111
    , “an
    interviewer who deliberately mischaracterizes witness
    statements in her investigative report . . . commits a
    constitutional violation.” Here, Plaintiff introduced sufficient
    evidence for a reasonable juror to find that this standard was
    satisfied. Krause’s investigative reports contained scores of
    quotations attributed to Kathryn and Matthew, both of whom
    unequivocally testified at trial that they had never made those
    statements. For example, Krause reported that, in October
    1984, Kathryn described detailed acts of sexual abuse by
    Plaintiff, and Krause’s report contained many specific
    quotations attributed to Kathryn. Kathryn testified at trial
    that, not only did she not make those statements to Krause,
    but she affirmatively told Krause that no abuse had occurred.
    The jury was permitted to credit Kathryn’s testimony rather
    than Krause’s contrary testimony. See, e.g., First Nat’l
    Mortg. Co. v. Fed. Realty Inv. Tr., 
    631 F.3d 1058
    , 1069 (9th
    Cir. 2011) (“[I]t was the jury’s province to make any
    credibility determinations and to resolve any factual
    disputes.”).
    To be sure, not all inaccuracies in an investigative report
    give rise to a constitutional claim. See, e.g., Black v.
    Montgomery County, 
    835 F.3d 358
    , 372 (3d Cir. 2016)
    (noting the limitations on a fabricated-evidence claim), cert.
    16                   SPENCER V. KRAUSE
    denied, 
    2017 WL 1540522
     (U.S. May 1, 2017) (No. 16-846);
    Whitlock, 682 F.3d at 586 (same). Mere “careless[ness]” is
    insufficient, Gausvik v. Perez, 
    345 F.3d 813
    , 817 (9th Cir.
    2003), as are mistakes of “tone,” Costanich, 
    627 F.3d at 1113
    . Errors concerning trivial matters cannot establish
    causation, a necessary element of any § 1983 claim. Black,
    835 F.3d at 372. And fabricated evidence does not give rise
    to a claim if the plaintiff cannot “show the fabrication
    actually injured her in some way.” Whitlock, 682 F.3d at 585.
    But, if Kathryn’s testimony is credited, the misquotations
    here cannot be explained as carelessness or as a mistake of
    tone; nor are they trivial or without consequence. Kathryn
    told Krause that no abuse had occurred. Krause falsely
    reported, in quotations attributed to Kathryn, that Kathryn had
    made detailed, explicit statements of abuse. Plaintiff testified
    that, due to the fabricated evidence, he entered an Alford plea,
    causing him to spend nearly two decades in prison.
    Because Plaintiff introduced direct evidence of deliberate
    fabrication, he did not have to prove that Krause knew or
    should have known that he was innocent. The district court’s
    contrary holding misapprehends our precedent.
    In Devereaux, 
    263 F.3d at
    1073–76, the plaintiff alleged
    that police officers used extremely aggressive interview
    techniques when questioning children, thus generating false
    evidence against him. In that context, we “assumed” that a
    plaintiff must
    point to evidence that supports at least one
    of the following two propositions:
    (1) Defendants continued their investigation
    of Devereaux despite the fact that they knew
    or should have known that he was innocent; or
    SPENCER V. KRAUSE                       17
    (2) Defendants used investigative techniques
    that were so coercive and abusive that they
    knew or should have known that those
    techniques would yield false information.
    
    Id. at 1076
    . We later applied that standard in cases involving
    allegedly aggressive interviewing tactics. E.g., Gantt,
    717 F.3d at 707–08.
    Those two prongs make sense in the absence of direct
    evidence of deliberate fabrication of evidence. If an
    investigator knows that a person is innocent, yet continues the
    investigation nevertheless, then the evidence suggests
    circumstantially that the investigator has an unlawful
    motivation to frame an innocent person, which supports a
    claim that the investigator deliberately fabricated evidence.
    Similarly, if an investigator knowingly uses coercive and
    abusive techniques that likely will generate false information,
    then that circumstantial evidence suggests that the
    investigator is deliberately fabricating evidence.
    But, as we made clear in Costanich, 
    627 F.3d at
    1111–14,
    those methods of proving deliberate fabrication are
    unnecessary in a case involving direct evidence of deliberate
    fabrication. In Costanich, there was direct evidence that the
    investigator had fabricated evidence—for example, direct
    misquotation of witnesses in investigative reports. 
    Id. at 1111
    . The district court had granted summary judgment to
    the defendants on the ground that the record contained
    insufficient evidence of either of the two Devereaux prongs.
    
    Id.
     We reversed, with the following explanation:
    The district court read the Devereaux
    standard too narrowly. Costanich alleges, and
    18                  SPENCER V. KRAUSE
    has produced evidence supporting her claim,
    that Duron deliberately misquoted and
    misrepresented witness statements, i.e.,
    deliberately falsified statements in her
    investigative report and declaration. The
    Devereaux test envisions an investigator
    whose unlawful motivation is illustrated by
    her state of mind regarding the alleged
    perpetrator’s innocence, or one who
    surreptitiously fabricates evidence by using
    coercive investigative methods. These are
    circumstantial methods of proving deliberate
    falsification. Here, Costanich argues that the
    record directly reflects Duron’s false
    statements.      If, under Devereaux, an
    interviewer who uses coercive interviewing
    techniques that are known to yield false
    evidence commits a constitutional violation,
    then an interviewer who deliberately
    mischaracterizes witness statements in her
    investigative report also commits a
    constitutional violation.      Similarly, an
    investigator who purposefully reports that she
    has interviewed witnesses, when she has
    actually only attempted to make contact with
    them, deliberately fabricates evidence.
    
    Id.
     Elsewhere in our opinion, we reiterated the point:
    It is also true that, in the course of her
    investigation, Duron could have believed that
    Costanich was guilty of [a state-law
    crime]. . . . If the only evidence of deliberate
    fabrication were inferences from Duron’s
    SPENCER V. KRAUSE                       19
    investigative methods, under Devereaux,
    Duron’s subjective and personal belief of
    Costanich’s guilt might have explained why
    Duron continued the investigation. 
    263 F.3d at 1076
    . That belief, however, does not
    permit or excuse deliberate falsification of
    evidence.
    
    Id. at 1113
    .
    In sum, the Constitution prohibits the deliberate
    fabrication of evidence whether or not the officer knows that
    the person is innocent. See Devereaux, 
    263 F.3d at
    1074–75
    (“[T]here is a clearly established constitutional due process
    right not to be subjected to criminal charges on the basis of
    false evidence that was deliberately fabricated by the
    government.”); Halsey v. Pfeiffer, 
    750 F.3d 273
    , 292–93 (3d
    Cir. 2014) (“[N]o sensible concept of ordered liberty is
    consistent with law enforcement cooking up its own
    evidence.”); see also Ricciuti v. N.Y.C. Transit Auth.,
    
    124 F.3d 123
    , 130 (2d Cir. 1997) (“No arrest, no matter how
    lawful or objectively reasonable, gives an arresting officer or
    his fellow officers license to deliberately manufacture false
    evidence against an arrestee.”). The district court erred by
    granting judgment as a matter of law to Defendants because,
    in this case involving direct evidence of fabrication, Plaintiff
    was not required to show that Krause actually or
    constructively knew that he was innocent.
    B. Causation
    Defendants challenge the jury instructions on causation,
    which required Plaintiff to prove that:
    20                  SPENCER V. KRAUSE
    5. Plaintiff suffered injury as a result of
    that [fabricated] evidence; and
    6. That evidence was so closely related to
    the deprivation of plaintiff’s right as to be the
    moving force that caused the ultimate injury.
    Defendants contend that the district court erred by not
    separately instructing the jury on “but for” causation and
    “proximate” causation, using those terms verbatim.
    “In a § 1983 action, the plaintiff must . . . demonstrate
    that the defendant’s conduct was the actionable cause of the
    claimed injury. To meet this causation requirement, the
    plaintiff must establish both causation-in-fact and proximate
    causation.” Harper v. City of Los Angeles, 
    533 F.3d 1010
    ,
    1026 (9th Cir. 2008) (citation omitted). The “moving force”
    formulation given in this case is most commonly used in
    cases involving municipal liability: “official policy must be
    ‘the moving force of the constitutional violation’ in order to
    establish the liability of a government body under § 1983.”
    Polk County v. Dodson, 
    454 U.S. 312
    , 326 (1981) (quoting
    Monell v. Dep’t of Soc. Servs., 
    436 U.S. 658
    , 694 (1978)).
    But we need not decide whether the district court erred or
    abused its discretion in using the “moving force” formulation
    in this individual liability case, because any error was
    harmless.
    The jury affirmatively found both that “Plaintiff suffered
    injury as a result of” the fabricated evidence and that the
    fabricated evidence was “the moving force that caused the
    ultimate injury.” (Emphases added.) See Gravelet-Blondin
    v. Shelton, 
    728 F.3d 1086
    , 1096 (9th Cir. 2013) (holding that
    “moving force” in the Monell context includes “both
    SPENCER V. KRAUSE                      21
    causation-in-fact and proximate causation”). Nor were
    Defendants prevented from arguing their theory of the case.
    Defendants argued to the jury that the fabricated evidence
    was not the moving force because of intervening
    events—such as non-fabricated evidence and Plaintiff’s
    Alford plea. But the jury necessarily rejected that argument.
    Ample evidence in the record supports the jury’s findings
    on causation. If Kathryn’s testimony is credited, very little
    evidence of Plaintiff’s guilt actually existed. Indeed, even
    with the fabricated evidence in the file, two prosecutors
    independently recommended that charges not be brought.
    Moreover, roughly the same amount of evidence implicated
    Stone as implicated Plaintiff—yet prosecutors declined to
    charge Stone, strongly suggesting that, had Krause not
    fabricated any evidence, prosecutors likewise would have
    declined to charge Plaintiff.
    Given the jury’s findings on causation and all the other
    elements, we see no likelihood that the jury would have
    concluded that but-for causation or proximate causation was
    lacking. We therefore easily conclude that “it is more
    probable than not that the jury would have reached the same
    verdict,” Gantt, 717 F.3d at 707, had the district court given
    Defendants’ proffered instructions on causation.
    C. Probable Cause
    Defendants next argue that the district court erred by
    declining to instruct the jury that Plaintiff was required to
    prove that, setting aside the fabricated evidence, probable
    cause was lacking. We disagree.
    22                   SPENCER V. KRAUSE
    The only two sister circuits to have addressed this issue
    directly have held that the plaintiff need not prove a lack of
    probable cause for the prosecution. Halsey, 750 F.3d at
    292–93; Ricciuti, 
    124 F.3d at
    129–31. Although we have not
    addressed the question squarely, our cases strongly suggest
    that a lack of probable cause to prosecute a defendant is not
    an element of a deliberate-fabrication claim. See Gausvik,
    
    345 F.3d at
    817–18 (analyzing whether the allegations met
    the standard for deliberate fabrication, even though probable
    cause existed); see also Costanich, 
    627 F.3d at 1113
     (holding
    that the investigator’s belief that a crime had been committed
    “does not permit or excuse deliberate fabrication of
    evidence”); Crowe v. County of San Diego, 
    608 F.3d 406
    ,
    432–37 (9th Cir. 2010) (upholding a Fourteenth Amendment
    coercive-interview claim while rejecting Fourth Amendment
    claims because of the existence of probable cause).
    Defendants assert that, when probable cause exists, an
    investigator’s deliberate fabrication of evidence does not
    shock the conscience. See Gantt, 717 F.3d at 707 (“[D]ue
    process violations under the Fourteenth Amendment occur
    only when official conduct shocks the conscience . . . .”
    (citation and internal quotation marks omitted)). We join our
    sister circuits in rejecting that assertion as inconsistent with
    the Fourteenth Amendment’s guarantee of due process:
    “Even if we agreed [that probable cause existed], we believe
    that no sensible concept of ordered liberty is consistent with
    law enforcement cooking up its own evidence.” Halsey,
    750 F.3d at 292–93; see id. at 293 (“A rule of law foreclosing
    civil recovery against police officers who fabricate evidence,
    so long as they have other proof justifying the institution of
    the criminal proceedings against a defendant, would not
    follow the statute’s [§ 1983] command or serve its purpose.”);
    Ricciuti, 
    124 F.3d at 130
     (“To hold that police officers,
    SPENCER V. KRAUSE                       23
    having lawfully arrested a suspect, are then free to fabricate
    false confessions at will, would make a mockery of the notion
    that Americans enjoy the protection of due process of the law
    and fundamental justice.”); see also Black, 835 F.3d at 371
    (“[D]eliberate framing by officials offends the most strongly
    held values of our nation.” (internal quotation marks
    omitted)).
    We have held that, to establish a Fourth Amendment
    violation where officers allegedly have included false
    information in a warrant affidavit, “the plaintiff must
    establish that the remaining information in the affidavit is
    insufficient to establish probable cause.” Hervey v. Estes,
    
    65 F.3d 784
    , 789 (9th Cir. 1995). But the reasoning of our
    Fourth Amendment cases does not apply here. Probable
    cause definitively resolves a Fourth Amendment claim for
    including false information in a warrant affidavit, because the
    Fourth Amendment mandates that “no Warrants shall issue,
    but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation.”
    U.S. Const. amend. IV. If bona fide information in the
    warrant affidavit establishes probable cause, then the plaintiff
    necessarily cannot state a Fourth Amendment violation
    because the warrant was, in fact, issued upon probable cause,
    supported by oath or affirmation. The warrant would have
    issued regardless of the false information; the plaintiff cannot
    “establish that, but for the dishonesty, the challenged action
    would not have occurred.” Liston v. County of Riverside,
    
    120 F.3d 965
    , 973 (9th Cir. 1997). In other words, in the
    Fourth Amendment warrant-issuance context, the probable-
    cause inquiry collapses into the causation inquiry.
    By contrast, the existence of probable cause does not
    resolve Plaintiff’s Fourteenth Amendment claim for
    deliberate fabrication of evidence. Plaintiff’s theory of the
    24                        SPENCER V. KRAUSE
    case—accepted by the jury—was that the fabricated evidence
    caused him to enter an Alford plea, which led to his serving
    nearly two decades in prison. Whether probable cause
    existed is entirely beside the point of that inquiry. The only
    causation question for the jury was whether the fabricated
    evidence did, in fact, cause his nearly two decades of
    imprisonment. See Part B, above. We therefore need not
    decide whether an instruction on probable cause would be
    proper in a case involving alleged damages stemming only
    from a prosecutor’s charging decision.4
    For those reasons, the district court properly declined to
    instruct the jury on the issue of probable cause.
    D. Deliberate Indifference
    The district court instructed the jury that, to find for
    Plaintiff, the jury must find that:
    1.     Defendant Krause deliberately
    fabricated evidence against plaintiff;
    2. Defendant Krause acted with deliberate
    indifference toward the constitutional right of
    plaintiff; [and four other elements.]
    Deliberate indifference is the conscious or
    reckless disregard of the consequences of
    one’s acts or omissions. It entails something
    4
    Our sister circuits have split on the closely related issue of whether
    a “deliberate fabrication of evidence” claim necessarily fails if the plaintiff
    was acquitted. See Black, 835 F.3d at 371 & n.12 (collecting cases). This
    case does not raise that issue because Plaintiff was not acquitted.
    SPENCER V. KRAUSE                       25
    more than negligence but is satisfied by
    something less than acts or omissions for the
    very purpose of causing harm or with
    knowledge that harm will result.
    Defendants argue that the district court erred by giving the
    instruction on deliberate indifference and the accompanying
    definition. Necessarily, requiring that Plaintiff prove an
    additional element—an added burden—cannot, by itself, have
    prejudiced Defendants.
    Defendants further argue that, because the first and
    second elements used similar words—“deliberately
    fabricated” and “deliberate indifference”—the jury may have
    misunderstood the first element as encompassing a deliberate
    indifference standard. We find no reasonable likelihood of
    confusion here. “A jury is presumed to follow its
    instructions.” Weeks v. Angelone, 
    528 U.S. 225
    , 234 (2000).
    The first and second elements are plainly separate; the phrase
    “deliberately fabricated” is not a technical term likely to
    confuse the jury; and the definition in the paragraph at the
    end of the instruction clearly defines “deliberate
    indifference,” not “deliberately fabricated.” Nor does the
    jury’s question regarding the instruction establish a likelihood
    of confusion. Rather, the jury’s question concerned the
    relationship between deliberate indifference and negligence,
    not between deliberate indifference and deliberate fabrication.
    E. Admission of Evidence
    Finally, we hold that the district court did not abuse its
    discretion by permitting Plaintiff to introduce certain
    evidence. The district court identified the correct legal
    standard, Federal Rule of Evidence 403, and its application of
    26                  SPENCER V. KRAUSE
    that standard was not illogical, implausible, or without
    support in inferences that may be drawn from the facts in the
    record. United States v. Torres, 
    794 F.3d 1053
    , 1059 (9th
    Cir. 2015), cert. denied, 
    136 S. Ct. 2005
     (2016). The
    evidence was relevant on many grounds, including to show
    credibility and state of mind, and the court gave a proper
    limiting instruction that is unchallenged on appeal. The fact
    that the evidence was also relevant to claims that were
    dismissed before or during trial does not affect the relevance
    of the evidence to the deliberate-fabrication claim that was
    presented to the jury. Evidence is often relevant to more than
    one claim.
    REVERSED and REMANDED with instructions to
    reinstate the verdict.