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    Stidham v. Post
                                           FILED
                               United States Court of Appeals
                                       Tenth Circuit
             
                                        SEP 24 2001
             
                                       PATRICK FISHER
                                           Clerk                             PUBLISH
             
                               UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
             
                                       TENTH CIRCUIT
             
             
             
             MIKE STEVEN STIDHAM,             
                                              
    
                  Plaintiff - Appellant,           
                                              
    
             v.                               No. 00-4036
                                              
    
             PEACE OFFICER STANDARDS AND  TRAINING; UTAH STATE  DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY;  STATE OF UTAH; SIDNEY P.  GROLL; and JOHN DOES 1-3,
                                              
                                              
    
                  Defendants - Appellees.          
                                              
    
             
                        APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
                                  FOR THE DISTRICT OF UTAH
                                   (D.C. No. 99-CV-624-B)
             
             
             
             Stephen W. Cook, Salt Lake City, Utah, for Plaintiff-Appellant.
             
             Nancy L. Kemp, Assistant Attorney General (Jan Graham, Utah Attorney 
             General, with her on the brief), Salt Lake City, Utah, for Defendants-Appellees.
             
             
             
             Before KELLY and McKAY, Circuit Judges, and BRIMMER,(1) District Judge.
             
             
             McKAY, Circuit Judge.
             
             
    
    
    
             (1)     Honorable Clarence A. Brimmer Jr., United States District Judge for the 
             District of Wyoming, sitting by designation.
             
     
                  Appellant Mike Steven Stidham brought state and federal claims in the 
    
             Third Judicial District of Utah against the State's Peace Officer Standards and 
    
             Training Division (POST) and various individual defendants.  After Defendants 
    
             removed the case to federal court, the district court dismissed the action under 
    
             Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6), and this timely appeal followed.  We 
    
             exercise jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C.   1291.   
    
                                       I.  Background
    
                  Appellant is a certified peace officer in the state of Utah.  To become 
    
             certified, Appellant completed a training and examination procedure 
    
             established by POST, the state agency empowered to regulate the certification 
    
             of peace officers employed in Utah.(1)  Appellant was subsequently hired by the 
    
             Salt Lake County Sheriff's Office then later joined the Tooele County Sheriff's 
    
             Office.
    
                  In July 1998, Tooele County issued a policy requiring its peace officers 
    
             to reside within county limits.  Appellant was not a Tooele County resident and 
    
             did not want to change his residence, so he sought employment elsewhere.  He 
    
             applied for one of seventeen open positions in the City of South Salt Lake; 
    
             however, despite being ranked third in the testing and interview process, the
             
    
    
             (1)     Similar state agencies have been created in forty-two other states.  See 
             Roger L. Goldman & Steven Puro, Revocation of Police Officer Certification: 
             A Viable Remedy for Police Misconduct?, 45 St. Louis U. L.J. 541, 542 n.6 
             (2001).
             
     
             city refused to hire him.  Appellant was advised that the basis for his rejection 
    
             was certain information provided by POST alleging that Appellant had raped a 
    
             young girl, assaulted a Tooele County resident, resigned from his position with 
    
             the Salt 
    
             Lake County Sheriff's Office under threat of termination, and was "at risk" as a 
    
             peace officer.  Appellant declared this information to be false and attempted 
    
             unsuccessfully to acquire POST's record of the allegations.  He also applied for 
    
             positions at other law enforcement agencies; however, despite being ranked 
    
             highly among a number of candidates, he was repeatedly rejected due to the 
    
             information provided by POST.  At no time did POST initiate proceedings to 
    
             suspend or revoke Appellant's certificate.  In addition, POST neither conducted 
    
             hearings nor provided Appellant with notice regarding the allegations against him. 
    
                  Appellant brought suit against POST, its director, and other individuals 
    
             employed by POST (identified only as John Does 1-3).  Appellant's first cause of 
    
             action alleged that Defendants violated Utah's Government Records Access and 
    
             Management Act, Utah Code Ann.   63-2-101 to 909, based on their refusal to 
    
             provide Appellant with copies of POST's records concerning him.  Appellant's 
    
             second cause of action alleged that Defendants violated 42 U.S.C.   1983 by 
    
             failing to provide him both substantive and procedural due process while 
    
             effectively revoking his certificate as a peace officer and foreclosing his 
    
             employment opportunities.  Appellant also alleged that Defendants invaded his
             
     
             constitutional right to privacy.  The district court dismissed Appellant's federal 
    
             claims under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) and remanded his state 
    
             claim to Utah's Third District Court.  Only the federal claims are at issue on 
    
             appeal.
    
                  We review de novo the district court's grant of a 12(b)(6) motion to 
    
             dismiss, bearing in mind that "all well-pleaded allegations in the . . . complaint 
    
             are accepted as true and viewed in the light most favorable to the nonmoving 
    
             party."  Sutton v. Utah State Sch. for the Deaf & Blind, 173 F.3d 1226, 1236 
    
             (10th Cir. 1999).  In addition, a "12(b)(6) motion should not be granted unless it 
    
             appears beyond doubt that the plaintiff can prove no set of facts in support of his 
    
             claim which would entitle him to relief."  Id. (quotation and citation omitted).
    
                                  II.  Due Process Claims
    
                    A.  Property Interest:  Peace Officer Certification
    
                  Appellant first contends that the district court erred in holding that he 
    
             failed to allege that the State deprived him of a constitutional property right 
    
             without procedural due process.  Appellant argues that he had a constitutionally-
    
             protected property right in his certification as a peace officer, which POST 
    
             effectively revoked without notice or hearing.
    
                  Procedural due process is only available to plaintiffs that establish the 
    
             existence of a recognized property or liberty interest.  See Setliff v. Mem'l Hosp.,
             
     
             850 F.2d 1384, 1394 (10th Cir. 1988) (citing Bd. of Regents v. Roth, 408 U.S. 
    
             564, 569 (1972)).  The Supreme Court has held that a license to practice one's 
    
             calling or profession is a protected property right.  See Bell v. Burson, 402 U.S. 
    
             535, 539 (1971).  In Bell, the Court held that a traveling minister's license to 
    
             drive automobiles could not be suspended without procedural due process.  The 
    
             Court declared: 
    
                  Once licenses are issued, as in petitioner's case, their continued 
                  possession may become essential in the pursuit of a livelihood. 
                  Suspension of issued licenses thus involves state action that 
                  adjudicates important interests of the licensees.  In such cases the 
                  licenses are not to be taken away without the procedural due process 
                  required by the Fourteenth Amendment.  
             
             Id. at 539.  Expanding upon Bell, Justice Brennan subsequently declared that 
    
             "[w]hat was said of automobile drivers' licenses in Bell v. Burson . . . is even 
    
             more true of occupational licenses."  Barry v. Barchi, 443 U.S. 55, 69-70 (1979) 
    
             (Brennan, J., concurring).  This court has previously suggested that in some 
    
             circumstances Forest Service permits, once issued, may warrant such 
    
             constitutional protection, see Fed. Lands Legal Consortium ex rel. E.A. Robart 
    
             Estate v. United States, 195 F.3d 1190, 1200 (10th Cir. 1999), as well as licenses 
    
             to sell beer, see Tanasse v. City of St. George, No. 97-4144, 1999 WL 74020, at 
    
             *2 (10th Cir. Feb. 17, 1999).
    
                  Thus, the revocation or removal of a license or certificate that is "essential 
    
             in the pursuit of a livelihood" requires procedural due process under the
             
     
             Fourteenth Amendment.  Bell, 402 U.S. at 539.  Because Appellant's certification 
    
             is both required and enables him to work as a peace officer in the State of Utah, 
    
             we agree that Appellant retains a protected property right in his peace officer 
    
             certificate.
    
                  Defendants do not dispute Appellant's right to due process for the 
    
             deprivation of his certification.  Instead, Defendants argue that Appellant has not 
    
             been deprived of his certificate because the certificate has not been revoked or 
    
             suspended, nor have revocation or suspension proceedings been initiated against 
    
             him, and thus no right to due process has arisen.  Appellant, on the other hand, 
    
             asserts that Defendants "effectively" revoked Appellant's certificate by 
    
             disseminating the aforementioned allegations against him to his potential 
    
             employers, thus removing all validity and benefit that the certificate may have 
    
             had.  
    
                  The resolution of this dispute is aided by an examination of POST's 
    
             statutory authority for collecting and disseminating information.  Under the Peace 
    
             Officer Training and Certification Act, Utah Code Ann.    53-6-101 to 310, 
    
             POST is managed by a director, who is empowered to "prescribe minimum 
    
             qualifications for certification of peace officers[,] . . . prescribe standards for 
    
             revocation of certification for cause . . . [and] provide for issuance of appropriate 
    
             certificates."  Id.   53-6-105(1)(b), (d).  The director is thus authorized to certify
             
     
             peace officers and give evidence of their certification.  Examining the remainder 
    
             of the Act, the director is only authorized to receive and disseminate information 
    
             regarding peace officers under two types of circumstances, both of which involve 
    
             the suspension or revocation of the officers' certificates.  First,   209 requires 
    
             agencies employing officers to submit a change of status form to POST when an 
    
             officer's employment terminates, indicating, inter alia, whether the officer "has 
    
             resigned, retired, terminated, transferred, deceased, or that the peace officer's 
    
             name has changed."  Id.   53-6-209.  Second, under   211:
    
                  (1)     (a)  The director may, upon the concurrence of the 
                  majority of the council, revoke, refuse, or suspend 
                  certification of a peace officer for cause.
             
                            (b)  Except as provided under Subsection 6 [suspension for 
                       felonies committed], the council shall give the person or peace 
                       officer involved prior notice and an opportunity for a full 
                       hearing before the council.
                  . . . .
             
                  (3)  The director shall send notice to the governing body of the 
                  political subdivision employing the peace officer and shall receive 
                  information or comments concerning the peace officer from the 
                  governing body or the agency employing the officer before 
                  suspending or revoking that peace officer's certification.
             
                  . . . .
             
                  (7)  The chief, sheriff, or administrative officer of a law enforcement 
                  agency is required to report to Peace Officer Standards and Training 
                  all conduct of employees who are peace officers, as provided in 
                  Subsection (1)(d) above [listing causes of action for revocation or 
                  suspension of certification].
             
     
             Id.   53-6-211. 
    
                  This presents a sensible system.  POST has been set up as the state 
    
             licensing agency for peace officers, established to provide standards, training, 
    
             certification, and decertification of such officers.  If a peace officer has acted 
    
             improperly, the officer's employer reports such conduct to POST's council.  If the 
    
             officer's actions warrant further action, the council gives notice and a hearing to 
    
             the officer, comporting with due process, and then votes as to whether the 
    
             officer's certification should be changed.  If the council votes in favor of 
    
             suspending or revoking the officer's certification, it informs the director.  Next, 
    
             the director notifies the governing body employing the officer of the potential 
    
             suspension or revocation and receives additional information or comments.  The 
    
             director then determines whether suspension or revocation is warranted.  
    
                  It is also important for us to note what the Act does not direct.  The director 
    
             is not empowered to notify the body employing the officer unless the council has 
    
             voted to revoke or suspend the officer's license following "prior notice and an 
    
             opportunity for a full hearing before the council."  Id.   53-6-211(1)(b).  More 
    
             pertinent to our inquiry, nowhere is the director or the council authorized to 
    
             report information about an officer to potential employers outside of POST's 
    
             normal role of evidencing her certification status.  Finally, neither the director nor 
    
             the council is authorized to conduct independent investigations of officer conduct
             
     
             unless the officer's employers have given the council information worthy of 
    
             initiating suspension or revocation procedures, which in turn invoke due process 
    
             for the officer.
    
                  Accepting Appellant's well-pleaded allegations as true, as we must, 
    
             Defendants have clearly acted ultra vires in this case.  They have disseminated 
    
             unproven and highly damaging allegations against Appellant, not simply 
    
             Appellant's status.  They have reported these allegations, for which Appellant 
    
             may potentially lose his certification, to Appellant's potential employers.  Finally, 
    
             Defendants have committed these acts without (1) giving Appellant prior notice 
    
             and hearing, (2) a determination and vote by the council, and (3) an investigation 
    
             and decision of the director. 
    
                  Although Defendants exceeded their authority under state law and ignored 
    
             statutory requirements for due process, we must still decide whether they violated 
    
             federal law-that is, whether Defendants deprived Appellant of his property 
    
             interest in his certification.  Appellant's certification has never actually been 
    
             revoked; however, Appellant claims that, as a result of Defendants' acts, he 
    
             cannot now obtain work as a peace officer using that certification.  Hence, we 
    
             must still determine whether an "effective revocation" of Appellant's certification 
    
             is possible and, if so, whether such occurred in the instant action.
    
                  This court has sanctioned effective revocations in other circumstances.  In
             
     
             Kenan v. Woods (In re Woods), 173 F.3d 770 (10th Cir. 1999), we held that when 
    
             a bankruptcy court reopened a Chapter 11 case, "vacatur of [its prior] closing 
    
             order effectively revoked [a] prior abandonment" of property that occurred when 
    
             the case was closed.  Id. at 781.  In Figuly v. City of Douglas, 76 F.3d 1137 (10th 
    
             Cir. 1996), we held that a city employee was not deprived of due process when a 
    
             personnel manual applicable to his contract "was effectively revoked when the 
    
             city council resolved to void `all employment contracts' that [the employee] had 
    
             with the city."  Id. at 1142.  These cases illustrate the sanctioned use of "effective 
    
             revocation" in some circumstances.  However, we are not aware of any previous 
    
             cases in this court discussing the effective revocation of a certificate or license. 
    
             For guidance, we turn to our sister circuits.
    
                  The Seventh Circuit's holding in Reed v. Vill. of Shorewood, 704 F.2d 943 
    
             (7th Cir. 1983), is instructive.  In Reed, the owners of a liquor license were 
    
             harassed by village police and subject to numerous groundless proceedings in an 
    
             attempt by village officials to take away the liquor license.  Although these 
    
             attempts failed, the continued harassment eventually caused the owners to close 
    
             their business and surrender their license.  In a suit against the village under   
    
             1983, the district court dismissed the complaint because the village had not 
    
             actually taken the owners' license.  The Seventh Circuit reversed.  It held:
    
                  The defendants never succeeded in taking away the plaintiffs' license 
                  either by revocation or nonrenewal . . . .  But "deprive" in the due
             
     
                  process clause cannot just mean "destroy."  If the state prevents you 
                  from entering your house it deprives you of your property right even 
                  if the fee simple remains securely yours.  A property right is not bare 
                  title, but the right of exclusive use and enjoyment. [Here] the 
                  plaintiffs were deprived of their property right in the license even 
                  though the license was never actually revoked.
             
                       The principle is familiar from the related area of takings of 
                  property that are subject to the just compensation clause of the Fifth 
                  Amendment.  If government makes your house uninhabitable, that is 
                  a taking of your property even if you retain a clear title.  The 
                  principle applies equally to deprivations as distinct from takings 
                  (permissible if compensated) of property and must, or state officials 
                  could with impunity destroy property rights in detail.
             
             Id. at 949 (citations omitted and emphasis added).  
    
                  Similarly, the Eighth Circuit held that city officials who had forbidden 
    
             builders from completing a shopping mall on land that had been zoned for the 
    
             mall's construction deprived the builders of a property interest, even though the 
    
             city never officially revoked the applicable zoning classification.  See 
    
             Westborough Mall, Inc. v. City of Cape Girardeau, 794 F.2d 330 (8th Cir. 1986). 
    
             That court held:
    
                  [T]he deprivation of a constitutional right does not depend on form. 
                  We must look at the substance of the actions taken relative to a 
                  constitutionally protected right.  The essence of a right may be 
                  destroyed although the plaintiff's right is still recognized in an 
                  ordinance or in a legal title.
             
             Id. at 336.
    
                  We are persuaded by the reasoning of the Seventh and Eighth Circuits.  In 
    
             the instant action, Defendants have disseminated false and fatally damaging
             
     
             allegations against Appellant to his potential employers.  Defendants have done 
    
             this in lieu of statutory procedures, in excess of their statutory authority, and in 
    
             contravention of statutorily-mandated procedural due process.  More importantly, 
    
             the consequence of Defendants' actions is that Appellant cannot use his 
    
             certificate to obtain employment.  Absent relief by this court, Defendants could 
    
             continue to prevent Appellant from acquiring employment.  A state agency cannot 
    
             escape liability for depriving an individual of a legitimate property interest merely 
    
             by arguing that it has not revoked or destroyed the actual legal title to that 
    
             interest.  Actions taken by the State which destroy the value or utility of a 
    
             protected property interest constitute a Fourteenth Amendment deprivation of that 
    
             interest for which due process cannot be denied.  Accepting as true Appellant's 
    
             well-pleaded allegations, it was error for the district court to dismiss Appellant's 
    
             action for failing to state a claim for the deprivation of a protected property 
    
             interest.
    
              B.  Liberty Interests:  Employment Opportunities and Reputation
    
                  Appellant also asserts that he has stated a claim that Defendants deprived 
    
             him of two related liberty interests.  The first-his right to enjoy employment 
    
             opportunities in his chosen field-has been repeatedly upheld in the courts.  In 
    
             Schware v. Board of Bar Examiners, 353 U.S. 232, 238-39 (1957), the Supreme 
    
             Court held:  "A State cannot exclude a person from the practice of [any]
             
     
             occupation in a manner or for reasons that contravene the Due Process or Equal 
    
             Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment."  This court has similarly held: 
    
             "The liberty interest that due process protects includes the individual's freedom to 
    
             earn a living."  Lentsch v. Marshall, 741 F.2d 301, 303 (10th Cir. 1984).
    
                  Appellant's second asserted liberty interest-his good name, reputation, 
    
             honor, and integrity-is more problematic.  While this court has recognized that 
    
             an individual's reputation is a protected liberty interest, it has also required 
    
             plaintiffs to show that their reputation was damaged "in connection with [an] 
    
             adverse action taken against them."  Flanagan v. Munger, 890 F.2d 1557, 1571 
    
             (10th Cir. 1989).  In other words, "defamation, standing alone, [is] not sufficient 
    
             to establish a claim for deprivation of a liberty interest."  Renaud v. Wyoming 
    
             Dep't of Family Servs., 203 F.3d 723, 726-27 (10th Cir. 2000).  
    
                  In Workman v. Jordan, 32 F.3d 475 (10th Cir. 1994), we integrated the two 
    
             interests asserted by Appellant into a four-part test for whether statements 
    
             infringe upon "a liberty interest in [one's] good name and reputation as it affects 
    
             [one's] property interest in continued employment."  Id. at 480.
    
                  First, to be actionable, the statements must impugn the good name, 
                  reputation, honor, or integrity of the employee.  Second, the 
                  statements must be false.  Third, the statements must occur in the 
                  course of terminating the employee or must foreclose other 
                  employment opportunities.  And fourth, the statements must be 
                  published.
             
             Id. at 481 (citations omitted) (emphasis added).  The "foreclosure of employment
             
     
             opportunities" aspect of the Workman test, upon which Appellant principally 
    
             relies for his liberty interest claim, was based in large part upon the Supreme 
    
             Court's decision in Paul v. Davis, 424 U.S. 693 (1976).  In Paul, the Court 
    
             determined that an individual is deprived of a protected liberty interest "`where 
    
             government action has operated to bestow a badge of disloyalty or infamy, with 
    
             an attendant foreclosure from other employment opportunity.'"  Paul, 424 U.S. at 
    
             705 (quoting Cafeteria Workers v. McElroy, 367 U.S. 886, 898 (1961)) (emphasis 
    
             supplied by Paul Court).  Similarly, in Board of Regents v. Roth, 408 U.S. 564 
    
             (1972), the Court held that a liberty interest would be deprived where "the State 
    
             . . . imposed on [the plaintiff] a stigma or other disability that foreclosed his 
    
             freedom to take advantage of other employment opportunities."  Id. at 573 
    
             (emphasis added).
    
                  However, subsequent to its decisions in Paul, Cafeteria Workers, and Roth, 
    
             the Court issued its decision in Siegert v. Gilley, 500 U.S. 226 (1991).  Siegert, a 
    
             clinical psychologist, resigned under threat of termination from a hospital 
    
             operated by the Federal Government in Washington, D.C.  Siegert then attempted 
    
             to gain employment at United States Army hospitals in Germany, which required 
    
             that his former employer provide information on Siegert's job performance. 
    
             Siegert's former supervisor responded by letter that Siegert was "inept and 
    
             unethical, perhaps the least trustworthy individual I have supervised."  Id. at 228
             
     
             (citation omitted).  "After receiving this letter, the Army Credentials Committee 
    
             told Siegert that since reports about him were extremely unfavorable . . . the 
    
             committee was recommending that [Siegert] not be credentialed."  Id. (citation 
    
             omitted).  Soon after exhausting his administrative appeals, the Court noted, 
    
             Siegert's "federal service employment [was] terminated."  Id. at 229.  Thus, the 
    
             alleged defamation written by Siegert's former federal employer effectively 
    
             prevented Siegert from gaining new employment in his field in United States 
    
             Army hospitals and perhaps other federal institutions.
    
                  The Supreme Court held that Siegert did not state a claim for the violation 
    
             of a protected liberty interest.  See id. at 233-34.  The Court reasoned that Siegert 
    
             had not been terminated incident to the alleged defamation and that damage 
    
             flowing from an injury to one's reputation "may be recoverable under state tort 
    
             law but it is not recoverable in a [federal] action."  Id. at 234.  Inexplicably, and 
    
             despite a vociferous dissent, the five-member majority in Siegert made no 
    
             reference to the constitutional deprivation of liberty caused by the foreclosure of 
    
             employment opportunities, which the Court had previously approved in Paul, 
    
             Cafeteria Workers, and Roth.  The Court in Siegert did not expressly overrule its 
    
             prior precedents; however, despite its lack of explanation, the Court's holding in 
    
             Siegert compels us to conclude that even though this action would have survived 
    
             under Paul and its progeny, it has foreclosed relief under the Liberty Interest
             
     
             Clause of the Constitution on the facts alleged in this case.  
    
                  Like Siegert, Appellant was not terminated incident to an alleged 
    
             defamation; Appellant resigned, then sought government employment elsewhere. 
    
             Like Siegert, Appellant was unable to obtain the type of government employment 
    
             he sought, allegedly due to the defamatory statements.  On facts so close that they 
    
             cannot be distinguished on a principled basis, the Supreme Court has foreclosed 
    
             finding that this set of facts deprive one of a protected liberty interest.  Thus, we 
    
             hold that Appellant has not adequately alleged a claim for the violation of a 
    
             constitutionally-protected liberty interest.  
    
                                       III.  Privacy
    
                  Appellant last alleges that Defendants' dissemination of the allegations 
    
             against him violated his constitutional right to privacy.  
    
                  The Fourteenth Amendment's Due Process Clause protects individuals from 
    
             state intrusion into fundamental aspects of their personal privacy.  See Paul v. 
    
             Davis, 424 U.S. 693, 713 (1976).  One such sphere of constitutionally-protected 
    
             privacy is "the individual interest in avoiding disclosure of personal matters." 
    
             Whalen v. Roe, 429 U.S. 589, 599 (1977).  In ascertaining whether a certain type 
    
             of information is given such protection, the court "must consider, (1) if the party 
    
             asserting the right has a legitimate expectation of privacy [in that information], 
    
             (2) if disclosure serves a compelling state interest, and (3) if disclosure can be
             
     
             made in the least intrusive manner."  Denver Policemen's Protective Ass'n v. 
    
             Lichtenstein, 660 F.2d 432, 435 (10th Cir. 1981).  However, in evaluating 
    
             information under this test, "we need not address the second and third factors if 
    
             the first is not met."  Falvo v. Owasso Indep. Sch. Dist. No. I-011, 233 F.3d 1203, 
    
             1209 (10th Cir. 2000).  Therefore, we will first determine whether Appellant had 
    
             a legitimate expectation of privacy in the allegations against him.  Notably, this 
    
             determination does not hinge on Defendants' failure to provide Appellant due 
    
             process or even the damage incurred to Appellant's employment or reputation. 
    
             "Mere allegations that an official failed to abide by state law will not suffice to 
    
             state a constitutional [privacy] claim.  The disclosed information itself must 
    
             warrant constitutional protection."  Nilson v. Layton City, 45 F.3d 369, 372 (10th 
    
             Cir. 1995).  For such information to warrant protection, it must be "highly 
    
             personal or intimate."  Id. 
    
                  In the instant action, Defendants alleged that Appellant resigned from his 
    
             position with the Salt Lake County Sheriff's Office under threat of termination 
    
             and was "at risk" as an employee.  Neither of these allegations contain 
    
             information that requires constitutional protection.  We do not consider reasons 
    
             for resignation or employee evaluations to be "highly personal or intimate."  In 
    
             this connection, we have "held that police internal investigation files were not 
    
             protected by the right to privacy when the `documents related simply to the
             
     
             officers' work as police officers.'"  Flanagan v. Munger, 890 F.2d 1557, 1570 
    
             (10th Cir. 1989) (quoting Lichtenstein, 660 F.2d at 435).  These allegations 
    
             castigate Appellant's on-the-job performance, foreclose his employment 
    
             opportunities, and may invoke tort liability for defamation, but Appellant does not 
    
             have a constitutionally-protected expectation of privacy in them.  
    
                  Next, allegations that Appellant raped a young woman and assaulted a 
    
             Tooele resident are also not so protected.  Certainly, such information is sensitive 
    
             in nature and considerably stigmatizes Appellant.  However, as we have 
    
             previously noted, "a validly enacted law places citizens on notice that violations 
    
             thereof do not fall into the realm of privacy," and "[c]riminal activity is thus not 
    
             protected by the right to privacy."  Nilson, 45 F.3d at 372 (citing Mangels v. 
    
             Pena, 789 F.2d 836, 839 (10th Cir. 1986).  It is irrelevant to a constitutional 
    
             privacy analysis whether these allegations are true or false; "[t]he disclosed 
    
             information itself must warrant constitutional protection."  Nilson, 45 F.3d at 372. 
    
             Because Appellant has not demonstrated a legitimate expectation of privacy in the 
    
             allegations made by Defendants, he does not state a claim for the violation of his 
    
             constitutional right to privacy.(2)  We thus affirm the holding of the district court in 
    
             this regard.
    
    
    
             (2)     Appellant's failure to state a claim that he had a legitimate expectation of 
             privacy in the disclosed information permits us to forgo analysis of the remaining 
             two factors.  See Falvo, 233 F.3d at 1209.
             
     
                            IV.  Absolute and Qualified Immunity
    
                  Defendants assert that Appellant cannot pursue his claims against them 
    
             because they retain both absolute and qualified immunity.  The district court did 
    
             not address this issue, since it determined that Appellant's constitutional rights 
    
             were not violated under   1983.  See Martinez v. Mafchir, 35 F.3d 1486, 1490 
    
             (10th Cir. 1994) ("To reach the question of whether a defendant official is 
    
             entitled to qualified immunity, a court must first ascertain whether the plaintiff 
    
             has sufficiently asserted the violation of a constitutional right at all.").  Having 
    
             found such a violation, however, we now consider Defendants' immunity claims.
    
                  Defendants correctly aver that "neither a State nor its officials acting in 
    
             their official capacities are `persons' under   1983."  Will v. Michigan Dep't of 
    
             State Police, 491 U.S. 58, 71 (1989); see also Ruark v. Solano, 928 F.2d 947, 950 
    
             (10th Cir. 1991).  Thus, neither POST, as a governmental entity, nor the 
    
             individual Defendants, in their official capacities for the State, may be sued for 
    
             damages under that section.  However, as Appellant points out, this does not 
    
             provide the individual Defendants with absolute immunity.  The Supreme Court in 
    
             Will was careful to note:  "Of course a state official in his or her official capacity, 
    
             when sued for injunctive relief, would be a person under   1983 because official-
    
             capacity actions for prospective relief are not treated as actions against the State." 
    
             Will, 491 U.S. 58, 71 n.10 (1989) (citations and quotations omitted).  To that end,
             
     
             Appellant's complaint includes a number of requests for injunctive relief.  See 
    
             Complaint, Aplt. App. at 29.  The complaint seeks to compel the individual 
    
             Defendants to:  (1) provide him with copies of all information, records, and 
    
             documents in their possession that pertain to him; (2) cease disseminating any 
    
             information about Appellant that is not authorized by statute; (3) purge its files of 
    
             false information not authorized by statute. See id.; see also Reply Br. at 14-15. 
    
             Thus, the individual Defendants do not retain absolute immunity from Appellant's 
    
             requests for injunctive relief.
    
                  Next, Defendant Groll-POST's director-claims qualified immunity from 
    
             Appellant's suit for damages against him in his personal capacity.  Defendant 
    
             Groll contends that   1983 claims "require a showing of an affirmative link 
    
             between the defendant's conduct and any constitutional violation," and that 
    
             Appellant has failed to allege such a link.  Appellee's Br. at 7 (quoting Summers 
    
             v. Utah, 927 F.2d 1165, 1167 (10th Cir. 1991) (quoting magistrate judge's report 
    
             and recommendation); see also Rizzo v. Goode, 423 U.S. 362, 370-77 (1976).  
    
             Appellant responds by arguing that neither Summers nor Rizzo required that an 
    
             affirmative link be alleged in the complaint; rather, such a link was required only 
    
             as part of evidentiary proceedings.  See Reply Br. at 15.  However, we have 
    
             previously required plaintiffs to allege the affirmative link in their complaints, 
    
             although with little explanation on that point.  See Meade v. Grubbs, 841 F.2d
             
     
             1512, 1527-28 (10th Cir. 1988).  Moreover, we have specified this requirement 
    
             previously in a number of unpublished opinions.  See Dametz v. Romer, No. 93-
    
             1213, 1993 WL 495066, at *1 (10th Cir. Dec. 1, 1993) (affirming dismissal 
    
             because the plaintiff "fail[ed] to allege facts demonstrating that the Defendants 
    
             personally participated in the alleged constitutional violations, or acquiesced in 
    
             the alleged wrongdoing") (citations omitted); Ernst v. Gunter, No. 93-1015, 1993 
    
             WL 436833, at *2 (10th Cir. Oct. 29, 1993) (holding that the plaintiff "fail[ed] to 
    
             allege sufficient facts to establish an `affirmative link'");  Chamberlain v. City of 
    
             Albuquerque, No. 92-2089, 1993 WL 96883, at *5 (10th Cir. March 29, 1993) 
    
             (holding that "Plaintiff must aver facts sufficient to support [such] a 
    
             determination . . . .  Plaintiff has not alleged any such facts.") (citation omitted); 
    
             Richardson v. Romer, No. 91-1410, 1992 WL 73048, at *1 (10th Cir. April 9, 
    
             1992) (bare allegation that superior officers should have known of constitutional 
    
             violations did not state a claim for relief under   1983).  This allegation 
    
             requirement has been adopted by other circuits.  See, e.g., Rivera v. Green, 775 
    
             F.2d 1381, 1384 (9th Cir. 1985), cert. denied, 475 U.S. 1128 (1986); Alexander v. 
    
             Ware, 714 F.2d 416, 420 (5th Cir. 1983); Rogers v. Rulo, 712 F.2d 363, 366 (8th 
    
             Cir. 1983).  We hold that the affirmative link described in Rizzo and its progeny 
    
             must be alleged in the complaint as well as proven at trial. 
    
                  Nevertheless, Appellant contends that, even if we require him to allege an
             
     
             affirmative link between Defendant Groll's actions and the constitutional 
    
             violations discussed in this case, Appellant has sufficiently done so.  Appellant's 
    
             complaint alleges that the "Defendants":  (1) wrongfully disclosed the improper 
    
             materials to his potential employers with "the specific intent to deter [his] 
    
             employment as a police officer;" (2) "wrongfully and unlawfully made 
    
             recommendations to law enforcement officers not to hire [him];" and (3) 
    
             "authorized dissemination" "to third parties, without notice and opportunity to be 
    
             heard."  Aplt. App. at 25-27.  Appellant further points out that the term 
    
             "Defendants" is defined in the complaint to include Defendant Groll, and thus the 
    
             affirmative link between Defendant Groll and the constitutional violations is 
    
             sufficiently alleged.  Reply Br. at 16.  While the link is rather loosely 
    
             demonstrated, our system of liberal pleading persuades us to accept Appellant's 
    
             allegation without parsing responsibility to the various Defendants specifically. 
    
             Therefore, Defendant Groll is not entitled to qualified immunity based on 
    
             Appellant's failure to allege an affirmative link between Defendant Groll's 
    
             actions and the constitutional violations incurred.  We add, however, that 
    
             Appellant must still prove that this link existed on remand to the district court.
    
                                     V.  Attorney Fees
    
                  Finally, Appellant requests an award of attorney fees and costs for this 
    
             appeal under 42 U.S.C.   1988.  The request for attorney fees is premature.  It
             
     
             must abide the determination on the merits.  Appellant is awarded his costs on 
    
             appeal.
    
                  For the foregoing reasons, the decision of the district court is AFFIRMED 
    
             in part, REVERSED in part, and REMANDED for further proceedings not 
    
             inconsistent with this opinion.
    
    

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