Sanders v. Jones, No. 15-6384 (6th Cir. 2017)
Annotate this CaseDecatur County Sheriff’s Department Officer Jones conducted a controlled buy of marijuana on May 22, 2013, through a confidential informant (CI) as part of a county-wide drug–bust operation. A warrant issued for Sanders's arrest and she turned herself in, but the state later dismissed the charges against her due to misidentification. Sanders filed a 42 U.S.C. 1983 suit for malicious prosecution, alleging that Jones prepared a misleading police report and gave false grand jury testimony identifying Sanders as the person who sold the CI drugs. Jones moved for summary judgment on the basis of absolute and qualified immunity. The district court denied both defenses. The Sixth Circuit reversed. Jones’s absolute immunity defense presented a question of first impression about how the Supreme Court’s provision of absolute immunity for grand jury witnesses in Rehberg v. Paulk (2012), intersected with the Sixth Circuit’s requirement that an indicted plaintiff present evidence that the defendant provided false testimony to the grand jury. The court concluded that Rehberg’s absolute immunity for false grand jury testimony precludes Sanders’s malicious prosecution claim because she cannot rebut the indictment’s presumption of probable cause without using Jones’s grand jury testimony.
The court issued a subsequent related opinion or order on April 4, 2018.
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