Court Opinion

ID: 8483227
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-10 22:00:38.971142+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:49:44.876515
License: Public Domain

USCA11 Case: 20-13761        Date Filed: 11/10/2022   Page: 1 of 32

                                          [DO NOT PUBLISH]
                              In the
         United States Court of Appeals
                   For the Eleventh Circuit

                     ____________________

                           No. 20-13761
                     ____________________

KELLY B. MATHIS,
an individual,
K.B. MATHIS, PA,
a Florida professional association,
                                              Plaintiffs-Appellants,
versus
DONALD ESLINGER,
an individual,
JAMES “SAMMY” GIBSON,
an individual,
APRIL KIRSHEMAN,
an individual,
PAMELA J. BONDI,
an individual,
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2                       Opinion of the Court                 20-13761

NICHOLAS COX,
an individual,

                                               Defendants-Appellees.

                     ____________________

           Appeal from the United States District Court
                for the Middle District of Florida
            D.C. Docket No. 3:19-cv-00274-BJD-JRK
                    ____________________

Before JILL PRYOR, GRANT, and ANDERSON, Circuit Judges.
PER CURIAM:
       For several years, Florida attorney Kelly Mathis and his law
firm, K.B. Mathis, PA, represented Allied Veterans of the World
and Affiliates, Inc. (“AVW”). AVW and related entities (its “affili-
ates”) operated about 50 internet cafes in Florida where customers
allegedly used computers to engage in illegal slot-machine gam-
bling.
       Law enforcement officials investigated AVW’s operations
and ultimately charged approximately 50 people, including Mathis,
with racketeering and other crimes under Florida law. As part of
the investigation, officers searched the law firm’s offices, seized its
records, and froze its bank accounts. Initially, a jury found Mathis
guilty of nearly all the charged offenses. But after a Florida
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20-13761               Opinion of the Court                       3

appellate court vacated his convictions, the State dropped the
charges against Mathis.
        Mathis filed this action, bringing claims under 42 U.S.C.
§ 1983 against Donald Eslinger, Seminole County Sheriff; James
Gibson, a Captain with the Seminole County Sheriff’s Department;
April Kirsheman, general counsel to the Seminole County Sheriff’s
Department; Pam Bondi, Florida Attorney General; and Nicholas
Cox, an attorney with the Statewide Prosecutor Office of the At-
torney General. According to the amended complaint, the affidavit
prepared to secure Mathis’s arrest included false statements and
omitted material information. After eliminating the false state-
ments and adding the omitted information, the amended com-
plaint alleged, there was no probable cause for Mathis’s arrest. The
district court dismissed the amended complaint, determining for
each claim that the defendants were entitled to absolute immunity
or qualified immunity. After careful consideration and with the
benefit of oral argument, we affirm.
                     I.     BACKGROUND
        This case arises out of actions that Mathis and the law firm
took while providing legal representation to, or lobbying on behalf
of, AVW, its affiliates, and individuals associated with these enti-
ties. In this section, we begin by reviewing how AVW’s internet
cafes operated. Next, we discuss the work that Mathis and the law
firm performed for AVW, its affiliates, and related individuals. We
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4                         Opinion of the Court                      20-13761

then discuss the criminal proceedings against Mathis. We conclude
this section by setting forth the procedural history of this case. 1
A.     AVW’s Internet Cafes
       Beginning in 2007, AVW and its affiliates opened internet
cafes in Florida. Customers would purchase internet time to use at
the cafes’ computers, paying about 20 cents per minute. When a
customer purchased internet time, he received free entries into
promotional sweepstakes.
       Customers would play games on the computers to reveal
whether they had a winning sweepstakes entry. The games had
names like Captain Cash, Lucky Shamrocks, Smokin 7’s, and
Money Bunny. Each game displayed “the results of the sweep-
stakes entries by graphic animation that simulated the spinning of
slot machine reels.” Doc. 64 ¶ 14. 2
      If the simulated spin revealed that the customer had a win-
ning sweepstakes entry, he would receive credits. The customer

1 The facts recited in this section are taken from the amended complaint,
which is the operative complaint. See Hunt v. Aimco Props., L.P., 814 F.3d
1213, 1218 n.2 (11th Cir. 2016) (“At the motion to dismiss stage, we accept the
well-pleaded allegations in the complaint as true and view them in the light
most favorable to the [non-movant].”). We also consider the content of the
affidavit that was submitted to the state court judge to obtain Mathis’s arrest
warrant because the affidavit was “referred to in the complaint, central to the
plaintiff’s claim[s], and of undisputed authenticity.” Luke v. Gulley (Luke I),
975 F.3d 1140, 1144 (11th Cir. 2020) (internal quotation marks omitted).
2 “Doc.” numbers are the district court’s docket entries.
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20-13761               Opinion of the Court                       5

could use the credits to play additional rounds of the games or re-
deem the credits for cash. When a customer used up his credits, he
could purchase more internet time to receive additional sweep-
stakes entries and continue playing the games. Some customers
spent tens of thousands of dollars at the cafes, purchasing more
than 100,000 minutes of internet time to play the sweepstakes
games and try to win cash prizes.
       The cafes operated for several years and generated over $300
million in revenue. According to AVW, it paid out approximately
65 percent of the proceeds it received as prizes to customers and
gave more than $5 million to charities supporting veterans.
B.    Mathis’s Representation of AVW
       Over a six-year period, Mathis and his law firm performed
legal work for AVW and its affiliates. For this work, Mathis and the
law firm earned substantial fees—more than $3 million. The ser-
vices Mathis and the law firm provided included giving legal advice
related to cafe operations; lobbying government officials on
AVW’s behalf; and representing, in civil and criminal litigation,
AVW, its affiliates, and related individuals.
       1.    Services Related to Cafe Opening and Operations
       Mathis and the law firm regularly provided legal advice and
services to AVW and the affiliates about the operation of the cafes.
      Before opening any cafes, AVW sought legal advice from
Mathis about whether it could legally operate the cafes under
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6                      Opinion of the Court               20-13761

Florida law. Mathis advised AVW of the parameters under which
it could conduct sweepstakes games.
        After receiving this advice, AVW began to open cafes. For
each location, AVW set up a separate affiliate, which was a subsid-
iary of AVW, to operate the cafe. Jerry Bass and Johnny Duncan,
who together controlled AVW, met with Mathis to decide where
each new affiliate would be located. Mathis and his law firm then
would prepare and file the paperwork to create the new affiliate.
Mathis served as the registered agent for AVW and most of the af-
filiates.
       Once the cafes began operating, Mathis and the law firm ad-
vised AVW and the affiliates on business issues that arose. When
some of the affiliates’ landlords complained about the cafes’ opera-
tions, Mathis met with Bass and Duncan to come up with a solu-
tion. Together, they created a new policy for AVW and the affili-
ates, which instructed employees to avoid “excessive police calls.”
Doc. 74-4 at 14. AVW and the affiliates relied on the law firm to
communicate the new policy, and they instructed employees at the
cafes to call the law firm if they had any questions.
       AVW also relied on Mathis and his law firm to communicate
with third parties who had questions about the sweepstakes. AVW
advised cafe employees to direct any questions from customers or
the media about AVW or how the sweepstakes operated to Mathis
or another attorney at his law firm.
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       In 2009, when customer Jeannette Hinkson had detailed
questions about how the cafes operated, AVW relied on Mathis to
answer her questions. In a single year, Hinkson spent over $66,000
at a cafe. After AVW reported to the Internal Revenue Service
(“IRS”) that Hinkson received over $48,000 in winnings for the
year, the IRS attempted to collect taxes on this amount. Hickson
did not believe that the entire amount should be taxed as income
and requested additional documentation from AVW to support her
position that she suffered a net loss that year from playing sweep-
stakes at the cafes.
       Mathis responded to Hickson on AVW’s behalf. He in-
formed her that AVW did not have the additional documentation
she requested. He told her that the company’s only records of the
amount of internet time she had purchased were “the Attorney
General sheets that we report to the Florida Attorney General
every year” and that, to compile this information, the company
would need “to sift through a warehouse” full of documents. Doc.
74-3 at 31. But, in fact, no such sheets or reports were submitted to
the Florida Attorney General. And, contrary to Mathis’s statement
about the need to sift through a warehouse for the information
Hickson requested, the company maintained data on its computer
system showing how much internet time each customer pur-
chased.
           2. Lobbying Work
      Mathis and his law firm also performed lobbying activities
for AVW and its affiliates. When AVW sought to open cafes in new
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8                      Opinion of the Court                20-13761

cities, Mathis would meet with local government officials and law
enforcement officers to persuade them of the legality of AVW’s op-
erations. When Florida’s legislature and local governments consid-
ered laws or ordinances that would have restricted the cafes’ oper-
ations, AVW again relied on Mathis to lobby on its behalf.
       In performing these activities, Mathis answered questions
and provided government officials with information about how the
cafes operated. For example, in 2011, when Seminole County con-
sidered an ordinance that would bar the operations of the internet
cafes, Mathis told county commissioners that AVW and its affiliates
were permitted to operate the sweepstakes under Florida law and
that there was neither a statute prohibiting the cafes’ business nor
a decision by a judge saying that AVW was operating illegally.
When someone mentioned that the cafes’ customers included
compulsive gamblers who were losing tens of thousands of dollars
at the cafes, Mathis denied it, saying that customers usually spent
only 20 to 30 dollars at a time. Notably, Mathis made this statement
after he communicated with Hinkson, who told him that she had
lost tens of thousands of dollars.
       AVW also relied on Mathis and his law firm to communicate
with local governments to verify that AVW and its affiliates were
complying with ordinances regulating the cafes. A Leon County
ordinance required AVW to place $50,000 in a trust account to
cover any prizes won in sweepstakes operated in that county.
Mathis submitted a sworn affidavit certifying to the county that the
law firm had received a $50,000 deposit from AVW and was
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20-13761                Opinion of the Court                      9

holding the money in its trust account, as required by the ordi-
nance. But records from the law firm’s trust account showed no
such deposit.
           3. Representation of AVW, Its Affiliates, and Related In-
              dividuals in Criminal and Civil Litigation
       Mathis and the law firm also represented AVW, the affili-
ates, and related individuals in civil and criminal litigation.
       Mathis and the firm represented AVW and individuals who
worked at the cafes in several criminal cases. In 2008, law enforce-
ment officers in Pinellas County arrested James Michael Hill, who
managed a cafe, and charged him with gambling-related state
crimes. The officers seized more than 60 “slot machines,” which
were the computers customers used at the cafe. In the criminal pro-
ceedings, Mathis represented Hill, who ultimately pled no-contest
to 12 counts of possession of a slot machine. In connection with
Hill’s guilty plea, the court ordered the slot machines destroyed.
Mathis persuaded the court to seal the records from this criminal
case, effectively concealing Hill’s plea from the public.
      In 2009, in connection with another investigation into illegal
gambling, law enforcement officers in Jackson County obtained a
search warrant for a cafe and seized its computers. Mathis acted as
AVW’s attorney. He negotiated and signed an agreement in which
AVW agreed to forfeit the computers and close the cafe in ex-
change for no criminal or civil action being taken against it.
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10                     Opinion of the Court                20-13761

       The next year, law enforcement officials in Marion County
investigated another AVW internet cafe. Jeaneen Crisante, who
operated the cafe, was charged in state court with gambling-related
crimes. Mathis, who represented Crisante in the criminal case, filed
a motion to dismiss, arguing that the cafe’s business was lawful.
The trial court denied the motion, concluding, for purposes of the
motion to dismiss, that the cafe’s computers qualified as slot ma-
chines under Florida law. A jury found Crisante not guilty, how-
ever.
       Mathis also filed several civil lawsuits on behalf of AVW to
challenge government actions regulating the cafes. In 2009, after
law enforcement officials in the city of Longwood shut down an
AVW cafe, Mathis filed on AVW’s behalf a lawsuit challenging the
closure. During discovery, Longwood requested detailed financial
information from AVW, but the company refused to produce it.
When the state court ordered AVW to turn over the records,
Mathis dismissed the suit so that the company would not have to
produce any financial information.
        In 2011, after Seminole County passed an ordinance that
banned AVW’s affiliated cafes from operating, Mathis filed on
AVW’s behalf a federal lawsuit challenging the ordinance as uncon-
stitutional. During discovery, Seminole County requested financial
records from AVW, and the district court ordered the company to
produce the records. To keep AVW from having to produce its fi-
nancial records, Mathis filed a motion for voluntary dismissal, stat-
ing that AVW and its affiliates had sold the cafes in Seminole
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20-13761                   Opinion of the Court                               11

County to a new owner who no longer wished to pursue the liti-
gation.3 In fact, AVW and the affiliates continued to operate the
cafes. They merely changed the names of some of the cafes to make
it appear that the cafes had been sold to new owners. Both before
and after the name changes, Mathis served as the registered agent
for most of these affiliates.
C.      Mathis’s Arrest and Criminal Trial
       Law enforcement officials in several Florida counties who
were working with the Florida Department of Law Enforcement
investigated AVW’s operations. Based on the investigation, Gibson
prepared a 441-page probable cause affidavit (“Master Affidavit”)
detailing how more than 50 defendants, including Mathis and the
law firm, allegedly committed hundreds of crimes in connection
with the cafes’ operation.
         The Master Affidavit set forth the relationship among AVW
and the affiliates. It identified the individuals tied to each affiliate’s
operations. One section identified the individuals who “own[ed],
operate[d], manage[d], supervise[d], or [were] employees of” each
affiliate. See, e.g., Doc. 74-1 at 61. Mathis was not listed among the
owners, operators, managers, supervisors, or employers for any af-
filiate. However, the Master Affidavit alleged that AVW, Duncan,
Bass, Mathis, the law firm, and other co-defendants “own[ed],

3 Mathis made a similar representation to a Florida state agency, telling it that
AVW had transferred ownership of nearly all the internet cafes to “non-affili-
ated companies” and was “no longer operating the locations.” Doc. 74-3 at 73.
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12                      Opinion of the Court                 20-13761

operate[d], manage[d], and/or control[led]” the locations where
the illegal activity had occurred. See, e.g., Doc. 74-4 at 18. Another
section of the Master Affidavit included a chart that listed the “Cor-
porate Officers & Registered Agent” for each affiliate. Doc. 74-1 at
35–37. Because Mathis was the registered agent for most of the af-
filiates, his name was repeatedly listed in this section.
        The Master Affidavit alleged that there was a “continuous
ongoing pervasive effort to organize, maintain, protect, expand,
and benefit from the statewide gambling efforts of the assorted en-
terprises of” AVW and its affiliates. Doc. 74-3 at 80. It explained
that to ensure illegal gambling could continue at the cafes, it was
“imperative to . . . conceal[]” information about the “manner in
which the enterprise operate[d]” and to hide information about the
“flow of the illegal proceeds” it generated. Id. The Master Affidavit
alleged that Mathis and the law firm “participated” in these efforts.
Id. It set forth in detail the work that Mathis and the law firm per-
formed for AVW, its affiliates, and related individuals. The Master
Affidavit described the payments the law firm received from AVW
and its affiliates as “proceeds derived . . . from the illegal gambling
operations of [AVW].” Doc. 74-2 at 56.
        The Master Affidavit was presented to a state court judge to
obtain arrest warrants for Mathis and others. Mathis was charged
with offenses under Florida law including racketeering, conspiracy
to commit racketeering, possessing a slot machine, conducting an
illegal lottery, keeping a gambling house, and money laundering.
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Based on the Master Affidavit, law enforcement officers also seized
documents from the law firm and froze its bank accounts.
        At his criminal trial, Mathis claimed that he lacked the req-
uisite mens rea for the charged offenses because he believed that
AVW’s sweepstakes were legal under Florida law. See Mathis v.
State, 208 So. 3d 158, 159–61 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 2016). By contrast,
the State argued that Mathis knew AVW’s sweepstakes games
were illegal and that he had engaged in deceptive conduct by mis-
representing to government officials the nature of AVW’s opera-
tions to make it appear as though AVW was running a legal sweep-
stakes. See id. at 161–62. Although the trial court allowed the State
to introduce evidence to show Mathis’s knowledge, it barred
Mathis from introducing evidence to support his position that he
believed the cafes’ operations were legal, ruling such evidence was
irrelevant. See id. at 161.
      A jury found Mathis guilty of all the charged offenses except
conspiracy to commit racketeering. He was sentenced to six years’
imprisonment.
        Mathis challenged his convictions on appeal, arguing that
the trial court erred in excluding his evidence. A Florida appellate
court concluded that the trial court had improperly barred Mathis
from introducing evidence “to rebut the State’s allegations that he
knowingly assisted [AVW] in violating Florida law.” Id. at 164. The
appellate court reversed his convictions and remanded for a new
trial. On remand, the State dismissed the charges against Mathis.
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14                         Opinion of the Court                       20-13761

D.      Mathis’s Lawsuit
      Mathis filed this civil action in which he brought claims un-
der 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against Eslinger, Gibson, Kirsheman, Bondi,
and Cox. In the amended (operative) complaint, he alleged that the
Master Affidavit included omissions and misrepresentations that, if
corrected, would have defeated probable cause to arrest and detain
him.
       The amended complaint raised the following claims:
(1) Mathis was arrested and incarcerated without probable cause,
in violation of the Fourth Amendment (Count II); (2) the defend-
ants engaged in malicious prosecution and conspired to commit
malicious prosecution based on the initiation of criminal proceed-
ings against Mathis without probable cause (Counts III & IV); and
(3) the defendants committed abuse of process based on their mis-
use of the criminal court process for improper motives (Count V).4

4 The amended complaint also included other claims that the district court
dismissed: a claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging that the defendants violated
the First Amendment by engaging in a retaliatory investigation and prosecu-
tion, and several state-law claims. The dismissal of these claims is not before
us on appeal. In the argument section of his opening brief on appeal, Mathis
devotes just one paragraph to the dismissal of the First Amendment claim and
one sentence to the dismissal of the state law claims. He provides no citations
to support his position that the district court erred in dismissing these claims.
Because Mathis makes no more than “passing references” to these claims and
“cites no authorities to support [his] conclusory assertions” that the district
court erred in dismissing the claims, we conclude that he abandoned any
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       The defendants filed motions to dismiss the amended com-
plaint. The prosecutors (Bondi, Cox, and Kirsheman) argued that
they were entitled to absolute immunity. Eslinger and Gibson ar-
gued that they were entitled to qualified immunity.
        The magistrate judge recommended that the district court
dismiss the amended complaint with prejudice. First, the magis-
trate judge determined that the prosecutors were entitled to abso-
lute immunity. They were entitled to absolute immunity, the mag-
istrate judge concluded, because the claims against them arose out
of actions they took in their role as advocates for the State in
Mathis’s criminal proceedings.
       Second, the magistrate judge concluded that Eslinger and
Gibson were entitled to qualified immunity. The magistrate judge
explained that qualified immunity turned on whether the Master
Affidavit established probable cause to arrest Mathis. The magis-
trate judge rejected Mathis’s contention that if the omissions and
misrepresentations in the Master Affidavit had been corrected,
there would not have been arguable probable cause to arrest him.
      Mathis objected to the magistrate judge’s recommendation.
The district court overruled the objections, adopted the magistrate
judge’s recommendation, and granted the defendants’ motions to
dismiss. Regarding arguable probable cause, the district court ex-
plained that the relevant question was whether the “alleged

challenge to the dismissal of these claims; we address them no further.
Sapuppo v. Allstate Floridian Ins. Co., 739 F.3d 679, 682 (11th Cir. 2014).
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16                         Opinion of the Court                      20-13761

misstatements and omissions negated [arguable] probable cause
that [Mathis was] involved in the subject criminal enterprise.” Doc.
96 at 8. Although the amended complaint alleged that some state-
ments in the Master Affidavits were false, “there [were] no allega-
tions that [other of] the underlying facts attested to in the Master
Affidavit . . . were false.” Id. at 9. Based on the unchallenged state-
ments in the Master Affidavit, the district court concluded that
there was arguable probable to conclude that Mathis was a “know-
ing participant[] in an illegal enterprise,” and thus Eslinger and Gib-
son were entitled to qualified immunity. Id. 5
       This is Mathis’s appeal.
                  II.      STANDARD OF REVIEW
       We review de novo whether an official is entitled to absolute
immunity or qualified immunity. See Paez v. Mulvey, 915 F.3d
1276, 1284 (11th Cir. 2019); Stevens v. Osuna, 877 F.3d 1293, 1301
(11th Cir. 2017). At the motion to dismiss stage, we “accept[] the
factual allegations in the complaint as true and draw[] all reasona-
ble inferences in the nonmoving party’s favor.” Paez, 915 F.3d at

5 In the amended complaint, the law firm was also a plaintiff, alleging a § 1983
claim based on a Fourth Amendment violation and a state-law abuse-of-pro-
cess claim. The district court dismissed these claims for the same reasons that
it dismissed Mathis’s claims: because the prosecutors were entitled to absolute
immunity and Eslinger and Gibson were entitled to qualified immunity. Alt-
hough we discuss only Mathis’s claims in the text, we affirm the dismissal of
the law firm’s claims for the same reasons.
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20-13761               Opinion of the Court                        17

1284 (alteration adopted) (internal quotation marks omitted); see
Stevens, 877 F.3d at 1301 (applying same standard to review grant
of absolute immunity at motion to dismiss stage).
       Although we ordinarily liberally construe pro se pleadings,
this rule does not apply when the pro se litigant is a lawyer. See
Hornsby-Culpepper v. Ware, 906 F.3d 1302, 1306 n.1 (11th Cir.
2018).
                        III.     DISCUSSION
       On appeal, Mathis challenges the district court’s conclusions
that the prosecutor defendants were entitled to absolute immunity
and that Eslinger and Gibson were entitled to qualified immunity.
We address each challenge in turn.
A.    The District Court Did Not Err in Concluding That the
      Prosecutors Enjoyed Absolute Immunity.
        We begin by considering whether the prosecutors were en-
titled to absolute immunity. “Traditional common-law immunities
for prosecutors apply to civil cases brought under § 1983.” Rehberg
v. Paulk, 611 F.3d 828, 837 (11th Cir. 2010). Prosecutors enjoy “ab-
solute immunity for all activities that are intimately associated with
the judicial phase of the criminal process.” Id. (internal quotation
marks omitted). The purpose of this immunity to “prevent[] har-
assment by unfounded litigation which could cause a deflection of
the prosecutor’s energies from his public duties and limit the pros-
ecutor’s independence of judgment.” Kassa v. Fulton Cnty.,
40 F.4th 1289, 1292 (11th Cir. 2022) (internal quotation marks
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18                      Opinion of the Court                 20-13761

omitted). “[T]he official seeking absolute immunity bears the bur-
den of showing that such immunity is justified . . . .” Id. (internal
quotation marks omitted).
        We apply a “functional approach” to determine whether a
prosecutor is entitled to absolute immunity. Id. at 1293. This “fact-
specific inquiry” requires us to “look[] to the nature of the function
performed, not the identity of the actor who performed it.” Id. at
1292 (internal quotation marks omitted). Under the functional ap-
proach, “a prosecutor is entitled to absolute immunity for acts un-
dertaken in preparing for the initiation of judicial proceedings or
for trial, and which occur in the course of his role as an advocate
for the state.” Id. at 1293 (alterations adopted) (internal quotation
marks omitted). When “a prosecutor functions in a capacity unre-
lated to his role as an advocate for the state, he is not protected by
absolute immunity.” Rehberg, 611 F.3d at 838. Prosecutors are not
entitled to absolute immunity when they “conduct[] investigative
work before an arrest, mak[e] statements to the press, [or]
provid[e] legal advice to police regarding pre-indictment investiga-
tion techniques.” Hart v. Hodges, 587 F.3d 1288, 1296 (11th Cir.
2009) (citations omitted).
      In this case, we conclude that the prosecutors were entitled
to absolute immunity because the claims against them arose from
actions they took in performing their role as advocates for the State
when they prepared for the initiation of judicial proceedings
against Mathis and for his trial. See, e.g., Doc. 64 at ¶¶ 75 (alleging
that the defendants were liable because “Mathis’[s] arrest,
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20-13761               Opinion of the Court                       19

incarceration, and conviction constituted an unreasonable seizure
and, thus, a violation of his Fourth Amendment rights”); 79 (alleg-
ing that defendants were liable for malicious prosecution because
they “initiated criminal proceedings against Mathis without proba-
ble cause”); 86 (alleging defendants were liable for conspiracy to
commit malicious prosecution because they “initiate[d] criminal
proceedings against Mathis without probable cause”); 93 (alleging
that defendants were liable for abuse of process because they “mis-
used the criminal court process”).
       On appeal, Mathis does not dispute that prosecutors gener-
ally are entitled to immunity for actions taken in connection with
an arrest, incarceration, and prosecution. He nevertheless argues
that the prosecutors were not entitled to absolute immunity be-
cause they engaged in misconduct “prior to the arrest” and that the
“arrest, incarceration, and prosecution [were] simply the result of
the misconduct.” Appellants’ Br. at 33. But the well-pled allegations
in the amended complaint do not support this argument.
       The thrust of the amended complaint was that the prosecu-
tors were liable because they initiated a criminal case when they
knew there was no probable cause to believe that Mathis had com-
mitted a crime. See Doc. 64 at ¶¶ 34 (alleging that the prosecutors
were liable because they “approved of, and/or directed, the arrest
of Mathis despite the lack of probable cause”); 37 (alleging that the
prosecutors engaged in “the concoction of false charges”). The
amended complaint also alleged that the prosecutors were liable
because of other actions they took in pre-trial proceedings,
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20                      Opinion of the Court                  20-13761

including decisions they made about Mathis’s bond and how they
conducted plea negotiations. Notably, the amended complaint in-
cluded no well-pled allegation that the prosecutors themselves con-
ducted any investigative work before Mathis’s arrest. See Hart,
587 F.3d at 1295. Because the allegations in the amended complaint
show that the claims against the prosecutors arose solely out of ac-
tions they took in initiating the criminal case and preparing for trial,
we conclude that the prosecutors were entitled to absolute immun-
ity. See Kassa, 40 F.4th at 1293.
B.     The District Court Did Not Err in Concluding That
       Gibson and Eslinger Were Entitled to Qualified Immun-
       ity.
       We now turn to whether Eslinger and Gibson were entitled
to qualified immunity. “Qualified immunity shields public officials
from liability for civil damages when their conduct does not violate
a constitutional right that was clearly established at the time of the
challenged action.” Echols v. Lawton, 913 F.3d 1313, 1319 (11th
Cir. 2019) (internal quotation marks omitted). To receive qualified
immunity, a defendant “bears the initial burden to prove that he
acted within his discretionary authority.” Dukes v. Deaton,
852 F.3d 1035, 1041 (11th Cir. 2017). The plaintiff then bears the
burden of proving that “(1) the defendant violated a constitutional
right; and (2) the right was clearly established at the time of the
violation.” Barnes v. Zaccari, 669 F.3d 1295, 1303 (11th Cir. 2012).
Because it is undisputed that Eslinger and Gibson were acting
within the scope of their discretionary authority, Mathis had the
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20-13761                  Opinion of the Court                            21

burden to show that the officers violated a constitutional right and
that the constitutional right was clearly established at the time of
the violation.
       Mathis argues that Eslinger and Gibson violated his clearly
established right to be free from an unreasonable seizure resulting
from malicious prosecution. In this section, we begin by explaining
what a plaintiff must prove to establish a constitutional violation
based on malicious prosecution. We then explain why the allega-
tions in the complaint were insufficient to establish that Eslinger
and Gibson violated a clearly established constitutional right.
       We recently “simplified our standard for malicious prosecu-
tion into two elements: the plaintiff must prove (1) that the defend-
ant violated his Fourth Amendment right to be free from seizures
pursuant to legal process and (2) that the criminal proceedings
against him terminated in his favor.” Luke v. Gulley (Luke II),
50 F.4th 90, 95 (11th Cir. 2022) (internal quotation marks omitted).
To establish a Fourth Amendment violation, a plaintiff must prove
that “the legal process justifying his seizure was constitutionally in-
firm and that his seizure would not otherwise be justified without
legal process.”6 Id. (internal quotation marks omitted).
       The Fourth Amendment protects “[t]he right of the people
to be secure in their persons . . . against unreasonable . . . seizures.”

6 We assume for purposes of this appeal that the criminal proceedings against
Mathis terminated in his favor.
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22                     Opinion of the Court                 20-13761

U.S. Const. amend. IV. It provides that “no Warrants shall issue,
but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation.” Id.
Under the Fourth Amendment, “before a warrant for arrest can is-
sue the judicial officer issuing such a warrant must be supplied with
sufficient information to support an independent judgment that
probable cause exists for the warrant.” Luke II, 50 F.4th at 95 (al-
terations adopted) (internal quotation marks omitted). For a mali-
cious prosecution claim, the determination of probable cause turns
on “what the affidavit charging the plaintiff stated.” Williams v.
Aguirre, 965 F.3d 1147, 1163 (11th Cir. 2020) (alterations adopted)
(internal quotation marks omitted). The “warrant affidavit must
set forth particular facts and circumstances underlying the exist-
ence of probable cause.” Franks v. Delaware, 438 U.S. 154, 165
(1978).
        Probable cause is established “when the facts and circum-
stances within the officer’s knowledge, of which he or she has rea-
sonably trustworthy information, would cause a prudent person to
believe, under the circumstances shown, that the suspect has com-
mitted, is committing, or is about to commit an offense.” Paez,
915 F.3d at 1285 (internal quotation marks omitted). Probable
cause “is not a high bar”; it “requires only a probability or substan-
tial chance of criminal activity, not an actual showing of such activ-
ity.” District of Columbia v. Wesby, 138 S. Ct. 577, 586 (2018) (in-
ternal quotation marks omitted). “So long as it is reasonable to con-
clude from the body of evidence as a whole that a crime was com-
mitted, the presence of some conflicting evidence or a possible
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20-13761                   Opinion of the Court                              23

defense will not vitiate a finding of probable cause.” Paez, 915 F.3d
at 1286.
        “[A]n arrest warrant is constitutionally infirm when . . . an
official, including an individual who did not apply for the warrant,
intentionally or recklessly made misstatements or omissions neces-
sary to support the warrant.” Luke II, 50 F.4th at 95–96 (internal
quotation marks omitted). 7 We apply a two-part test to determine
whether misstatements or omissions in an officer’s warrant affida-
vit amount to a Fourth Amendment violation. Paez, 915 F.3d at
1287. First, we consider “whether there was an intentional or reck-
less misstatement or omission.” Id. Second, “we examine the ma-
teriality of the information by inquiring whether probable cause
would be negated if the offending statement was removed or the
omitted information included.” Id. If the warrant affidavit (includ-
ing the omitted information or correcting the misstated infor-
mation) “would have demonstrated even arguable probable
cause—that a reasonable officer could have believed an offense was

7 An arrest warrant also is constitutionally infirm when “the officer who ap-
plied for the warrant should have known that his application failed to establish
probable cause.” Luke II, 50 F.4th at 95–96 (internal quotation marks omitted).
Here, Mathis relies solely on the argument that the warrant was constitution-
ally infirm because of omissions or misstatements in the warrant affidavit.
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24                         Opinion of the Court                      20-13761

committed—then the officers are entitled to qualified immunity.”
Id. at 1288. 8
       We now apply this two-part test to determine whether
Mathis’s arrest was constitutionally infirm because Eslinger and
Gibson intentionally or recklessly made misstatements or omis-
sions in the Master Affidavit. Mathis does not dispute that the sub-
stance of the Master Affidavit was sufficient to establish probable
cause that all the other defendants committed the charged crimes.
But after removing the misstatements and adding the material in-
formation that was omitted, he says, the Master Affidavit contained
insufficient information to establish that he “knowingly assisted
[AVW] to commit a crime,” rendering the Master Affidavit consti-
tutionally infirm. Appellants’ Br. at 9 (emphasis omitted). 9 We

8 Mathis brought separate § 1983 claims alleging violations of the Fourth
Amendment, malicious prosecution, conspiracy to commit malicious prose-
cution, and abuse of process. On appeal Mathis appears to have lumped all the
claims together. For all the claims, he treats qualified immunity as turning on
the question of whether, if the alleged misstatements and omissions in the
Master Affidavit had been corrected, there would have been arguable probable
cause for his arrest. We thus limit our analysis to this question.
9 We have previously recognized that the “any-crime rule,” under which an
officer who makes a warrantless arrest is insulated from liability so long as
probable cause existed to arrest the suspect for some crime, does not apply in
the malicious prosecution context. Williams, 965 F.3d at 1162. Accordingly, a
plaintiff who was charged with multiple crimes may establish a claim for ma-
licious prosecution by showing that the officers lacked probable cause to arrest
him for at least one charged crime. Id.
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20-13761                   Opinion of the Court                               25

disagree. Eslinger and Gibson were entitled to qualified immunity
because they had at least arguable probable cause to believe that
Mathis knowingly assisted AVW in committing a crime. 10
       At the first step of our two-part test, we ask “whether there
was an intentional or reckless misstatement or omission” in the
Master Affidavit. Paez, 915 F.3d at 1286. The amended complaint
alleged that the Master Affidavit contained several misstatements
and omissions that Eslinger and Gibson “intentionally” made. Doc.
64 at ¶¶ 39, 41. Because this case is at the motion to dismiss stage,
we accept the amended complaint’s well-pled allegations that

Although Mathis was charged with multiple crimes, he raises a single argu-
ment that applies to each crime, challenging only whether the allegations in
the Master Affidavit were sufficient to establish that he was a knowing partic-
ipant in the criminal scheme. Because he does not tether his intent-based ar-
gument to any of the particular elements required for any of the charged
crimes, we limit our analysis to whether the Master Affidavit established that
there was probable cause that he knowingly assisted AVW in committing a
crime.
10 Mathis also argues that because this case was at the motion to dismiss stage,
it was “premature” for the district court to consider the Master Affidavit. Ap-
pellants’ Br. at 14. We disagree. At the motion to dismiss stage, we may con-
sider the substance of the arrest affidavit to determine whether there would
have been arguable probable cause if the alleged misstatements or omissions
had been corrected. See Paez, 915 F.3d at 1287–88 (reversing denial of qualified
immunity to officers on malicious prosecution claim at the motion to dismiss
stage when, after considering the information that allegedly had been omitted
from the arrest affidavits together with the information in those affidavits, the
officers still would have had probable cause to believe that the plaintiffs had
committed a crime).
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26                      Opinion of the Court               20-13761

Eslinger and Gibson intentionally or recklessly omitted the follow-
ing information from the Master Affidavit:
     • Florida’s Commissioner of Agriculture had stated that the
       internet cafes’ operations were legal;
     • The Florida Senate twice investigated the internet cafes and
       had not concluded that they were illegal;
     • Local governments in Florida had passed municipal ordi-
       nances regulating and permitting internet cafes;
     • At least three law review articles had opined that the inter-
       net cafes were legal; and
     • No Florida court had found the internet cafes’ operations il-
       legal.
       Mathis also alleged that the Master Affidavit misstated that
he “was a corporate officer” for AVW and the affiliates. Id. at ¶ 36.
Even though at the motion to dismiss stage we generally accept the
allegations in a complaint as true, see Paez, 915 F.3d at 1284, we do
not credit this allegation. The amended complaint’s allegation
about the content of the Master Affidavit is directly contradicted by
the Master Affidavit itself. The Master Affidavit identified each of
the corporate officers for AVW but did not list Mathis. Mathis
points out that he was included in a chart that listed the “Corporate
Officers & Registered Agent” for each affiliate. Doc. 74-1 at 35–37.
But the Master Affidavit reflects that Mathis was included in this
chart because he was the registered agent for AVW and many of
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20-13761                Opinion of the Court                        27

the affiliates. (There is no dispute that Mathis was, in fact, the reg-
istered agent.) Because the Master Affidavit never stated that
Mathis was a corporate officer of AVW or any affiliate, we do not
credit the amended complaint’s allegation that the Master Affidavit
included such a statement. See Gill ex rel. K.C.R. v. Judd, 941 F.3d
504, 514 (11th Cir. 2019) (explaining that when a document contra-
dicts the complaint’s allegations “about what the document is or
says,” the document governs (internal quotation marks omitted)).
        In the amended complaint, Mathis alleged that the Master
Affidavit contained other “mischaracterizations, false impressions,
false statements, exaggerations, and omissions.” Doc. 64 at ¶ 44.
But because the amended complaint never identified these addi-
tional misstatements and omissions, we disregard this conclusory
allegation. See Franklin v. Curry, 738 F.3d 1246, 1251 (11th Cir.
2013) (explaining that a court disregards “conclusory allegations”
because they “fail to apprise defendants of the factual basis of the
plaintiff’s claims”); see also Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 556 U.S. 662, 678
(2009) (explaining that a plaintiff cannot rely on “naked assertions
devoid of further factual enhancement” (alteration adopted) (inter-
nal quotation marks omitted)).
       In a previous case in the malicious prosecution context, we
disregarded a similar allegation that an officer made “material mis-
statements and omissions” in an arrest affidavit. Gill, 941 F.3d at
515 (internal quotation marks omitted). We explained that this
type of “general” statement was “so broad that it provides us no
help in determining which statements in the affidavit are material
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28                        Opinion of the Court                      20-13761

misstatements or what has been omitted.” Id. Consistent with Gill,
we do not consider the amended complaint’s conclusory allegation
that the Master Affidavit contained other, unidentified false state-
ments or omissions.11
         Turning to the second step of our two-part test, we conclude
that probable cause would not have been negated if the misstate-
ments or omissions identified in the amended complaint had been
corrected. We assume that the additional information Mathis says
should have been included in the Master Affidavit would have sup-
ported an inference that he did not knowingly assist AVW in com-
mitting a crime. But even with this additional information, a rea-
sonable officer nonetheless could have concluded from the Master
Affidavit that there was probable cause to believe that Mathis
knowingly assisted AVW in committing a crime. See Paez, 915 F.3d
at 1286 (explaining that “the presence of some conflicting evidence
. . . will not vitiate a finding of probable cause”).
      From the Master Affidavit, a reasonable officer could have
concluded there was probable cause because the Master Affidavit

11 At oral argument, Mathis asserted that other specific statements in the Mas-
ter Affidavit were false. But the amended complaint did not allege the falsity
of these statements. Parties “are not permitted to simply ‘insert’ new allega-
tions” into their complaints via appellate briefing. Quality Auto Painting Ctr.
of Roselle, Inc. v. State Farm Indem. Co., 917 F.3d 1249, 1262 (11th Cir. 2019)
(en banc); see also Michel v. NYP Holdings, Inc., 816 F.3d 686, 705 (11th Cir.
2016) (explaining that an appellant “cannot [on appeal] use his briefing to add
new allegations and argue that those new assertions support his cause of ac-
tion”).
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20-13761               Opinion of the Court                       29

described several incidents in which Mathis participated in the
criminal scheme by helping to conceal and cover up information
about how the internet cafes operated or the flow of the illegal pro-
ceeds.
       First, when customer Hickson requested information from
AVW about her winnings in the previous year, Mathis gave her
incorrect information about the company’s recordkeeping prac-
tices when he said that the only way for AVW to determine how
much internet time a customer had purchased was to manually re-
view paper records. In fact, this information was maintained on the
company’s computers or servers. A reasonable officer could have
concluded that Mathis made this false statement to Hickson to pre-
vent AVW from having to turn over detailed records that may have
shown that gambling was occurring at the internet cafes.
       Second, when Seminole County was considering an ordi-
nance that would have banned the cafes, Mathis lobbied govern-
ment officials on AVW’s behalf, telling them the cafes’ operations
were permitted under Florida law. Mathis denied that AVW’s cus-
tomers included compulsive gamblers who were losing tens of
thousands of dollars at the cafes and said customers usually spent
only 20 or 30 dollars at a time. Notably, he made this statement
after communicating with Hickson, who told Mathis that she had
spent—and lost—tens of thousands of dollars at the cafes in a single
year. A reasonable officer could conclude that Mathis knowingly
provided the county commissioner with this incorrect information
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30                         Opinion of the Court                       20-13761

about AVW’s operations to conceal that gambling was occurring
at cafes and to ensure that the cafes could continue operating.
       Third, to operate a cafe in Leon County, a local ordinance
required AVW to place $50,000 in a trust account to cover any
prizes won. Mathis submitted an affidavit to Leon County certify-
ing that that AVW had deposited $50,000 into the law firm’s trust
account. But, according to the Master Affidavit, the banking rec-
ords for the law firm’s trust account reflected no such deposit.
From this incident, a reasonable officer could conclude that Mathis
provided false information about AVW to a government official in
an effort to conceal AVW’s failure to comply with the law.
       Fourth, to secure dismissal of a lawsuit in which AVW had
been ordered to produce financial records, Mathis told a federal
court that AVW and the affiliates had sold the cafes and no longer
operated them. 12 In fact, the cafes had simply changed names. The
same individuals owned the cafes, the same employees worked at
the cafes, and Mathis remained their registered agent. 13 A

12 Mathis also made a similar statement to a Florida agency.
13 The amended complaint also alleged that the Master Affidavit misrepre-
sented that the law firm “receive[d] proceeds derived . . . from the illegal gam-
bling operations” at the cafes. Doc. 64 at ¶ 46. But the amended complaint
alleged that the law firm received payments from AVW and its affiliates. See
also Appellants’ Br. at 30 (admitting that the law firm “receiv[ed] legal fees on
an hourly basis for legal services actually performed”). Mathis’s allegation that
the Master Affidavit contained a misrepresentation related to the receipt of
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20-13761                   Opinion of the Court                               31

reasonable officer could conclude that Mathis provided the court
with false information about the cafes’ ownership to ensure that
AVW would not have to produce financial records that would have
revealed the company’s illegal operations and the flow of proceeds
among AVW and the other entities.
       Based on the Master Affidavit, a reasonable officer could
have concluded that there was a substantial chance that Mathis
knew that AVW was engaged in illegal activities and actively “par-
ticipated” in the illegal scheme by “concealing the true nature” of
AVW’s business to ensure that the cafes could continue to operate
with their illegal actions undetected. 14 Doc. 74-3 at 80. Indeed,
Mathis concedes that Eslinger and Gibson were entitled to qualified
immunity if there was arguable probable cause to believe that “[he]
knowingly assisted” AVW in committing a crime. Appellants’ Br.

fees boils down to an assertion that the law firm’s receipt of fees was innocent
because he simply performed legal work for AVW and did not assist AVW in
any criminal conduct. But as we explain above, a reasonable officer could have
had probable cause to believe that Mathis was actively assisting AVW in its
criminal scheme by helping to cover up its illegal activities.
14 In the decision reversing Mathis’s criminal convictions, the Florida appel-
late court held that the trial court had improperly excluded Mathis’s evidence
and “effectively prevent[ed] him from arguing that he lacked the requisite
mens rea for his offenses.” Mathis, 208 So. 3d at 159. Even though it remanded
the case for a new trial, the court nevertheless accepted that at trial the State
could rely on evidence showing that Mathis had “knowingly misrepresented”
or concealed information about AVW’s business model to establish that he
acted with the requisite mens rea. Id. at 164.
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32                     Opinion of the Court                20-13761

at 9. We agree and thus conclude that Eslinger and Gibson were
entitled to qualified immunity.
                      IV.    CONCLUSION
      For the reasons set forth above, we affirm the district court’s
dismissal of the amended complaint.
      AFFIRMED.