Court Opinion

ID: 3000676
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-09-24 20:07:49.424937+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:50:07.808007
License: Public Domain

In the
 United States Court of Appeals
              For the Seventh Circuit
                        ____________

No. 06-2017
GORDON STEIDL,
                                            Plaintiff-Appellee,
                              v.

STEVEN M. FERMON, DIANE CARPER,
CHARLES E. BRUEGGEMANN, et al.,
                                   Defendants-Appellants.
                        ____________
          Appeal from the United States District Court
              for the Central District of Illinois.
            No. 05-2127—Harold A. Baker, Judge.
                        ____________
    ARGUED DECEMBER 5, 2006—DECIDED JULY 18, 2007
                   ____________

  Before FLAUM, WOOD, and EVANS, Circuit Judges.
  WOOD, Circuit Judge. Gordon “Randy” Steidl spent
more than seventeen years in jail for a double homicide
that he insists he did not commit. What makes this even
worse is the fact (according to Steidl) that from the
outset Illinois state police officers knowingly possessed
and concealed evidence of his innocence, and they never
disclosed this evidence to him, throughout his trial, his
appeals, and most of his post-conviction proceedings.
Steidl was finally released in 2004 after a federal district
court, concluding that “acquittal was reasonably probable
if the jury had heard all of the evidence,” granted his
2                                                No. 06-2017

petition for a writ of habeas corpus. Steidl v. Walls, 267
F. Supp. 2d 919, 940 (C.D. Ill. 2003). Following his re-
lease from prison, Steidl brought a suit under 42 U.S.C.
§ 1983 against Illinois police officers Steven M. Fermon,
Diane Carper, Charles E. Brueggemann, Andre Parker
and Kenneth Kaupus and others for violating his due
process right to be told about exculpatory evidence in
accordance with Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963).
  The wrinkle in this case is the fact that the present five
defendants (to whom we refer as the ISP Officials) were
not involved in Steidl’s case during its earlier stages.
While Steidl’s post-conviction proceeding was pending
in state appellate court, however, they did learn about the
existing exculpatory evidence and that the state had
possessed this evidence all along. Rather than advise the
state appellate court that the state had prosecuted the
wrong man, the defendants kept mum and took steps
actively to conceal the exculpatory evidence.
  Faced with Steidl’s § 1983 suit, the defendants moved
to dismiss on the basis of qualified immunity; the dis-
trict court denied their motion; and this interlocutory
appeal followed. As things now stand, Steidl is relying
on two theories for recovery: in Count II he claims that
he was deprived of a fair trial and was wrongfully con-
victed because the ISP Officials concealed exculpatory
evidence from the courts during his post-conviction
proceedings; in Count III he claims that he was denied
proper access to the courts. We agree with the district
court that the Brady line of cases has clearly established
a defendant’s right to be informed about exculpatory
evidence throughout the proceedings, including appeals
and authorized post-conviction procedures, when that
exculpatory evidence was known to the state at the time
of the original trial. Steidl is thus entitled to proceed under
his first theory. We conclude, however, that the
ISP Officials were entitled to qualified immunity on the
access-to-courts theory.
No. 06-2017                                               3

                             I
  We begin, as we frequently do, with the question of our
jurisdiction over this appeal. “ ‘Under the collateral order
doctrine the district court’s denial of [a] motion for sum-
mary judgment based on qualified immunity is an im-
mediately appealable ‘final decision’ within the meaning
of 28 U.S.C. § 1291 to the extent that it turns on legal
rather than factual questions.’ ” Via v. La Grand, 469 F.3d
618, 622 (7th Cir. 2006), quoting from Wernsing v. Thomp-
son, 423 F.3d 732, 741 (7th Cir. 2005). As we explained
in Borello v. Allison, 446 F.3d 742 (7th Cir. 2006),
    [t]he Court’s jurisdiction extends to interlocutory
    appeals such as this one challenging a district court’s
    determination that a set of facts demonstrate a vio-
    lation of “clearly established” constitutional law and
    preclude the defendants from proffering a qualified
    immunity defense. When deciding whether a public
    official is entitled to qualified immunity, we simply
    assume the disputed facts in the light most favorable
    [to the plaintiff], and then decide, under those facts,
    whether the [defendants] violated any of [the plain-
    tiff ’s] clearly established constitutional rights.
Id. at 747 (internal citations and quotations omitted). See
also Saucier v. Katz, 533 U.S. 194, 201 (2001).
  Taking the facts in that light, the following story
emerges. Steidl is innocent of the crimes for which he was
convicted in 1987. He spent 17 years in prison, includ-
ing 12 on death row, for the July 1986 murders of Dyke
and Karen Rhoads and for arson. The investigation that
led to his conviction was conducted by police chief Gene
Ray of Paris, Illinois, with the help of lead detective
James Parrish, Edgar County State’s Attorney Michael
McFatridge, and Illinois State Police investigator Jack
Eckerty. These men are defendants in this case, but they
are not parties to this interlocutory appeal. Together, they
4                                               No. 06-2017

ignored evidence that would have demonstrated Steidl’s
innocence, including especially a credible lead pointing to
an influential Paris businessman (called John Doe here)
and some of his employees as the guilty parties. Ray,
Parrish, McFatridge, and Eckerty based their case
against Steidl on the coerced testimony of two unstable
witnesses. Ray and his team also elicited false inculpatory
statements from other witnesses, including a compensated
jailhouse informant. No one turned over any exculpatory
evidence to Steidl throughout his trial, appeal, or post-
conviction proceeding. Some of the available evidence
would have shredded the state’s case, such as the fact
that one of the state’s witnesses named “Jim and Ed” as
the perpetrators.
   In April 2000, the Illinois State Police assigned Lieuten-
ant Michale Callahan to review the Rhoads murders.
Callahan discovered much of the evidence in the file that
had been available to Eckerty and the other original
investigators and recognized immediately that it was
exculpatory. In a memorandum on May 17, 2000, he
listed fact after fact that undermined the credibility of
the state’s witnesses and identified John Doe as the
suspect who “was at one time and should still be the
focus of the investigation.” Doe, Callahan’s memo noted,
had made significant campaign contributions to high-
ranking elected officials in the area. Neither the informa-
tion Callahan uncovered nor his memorandum was
disclosed to Steidl, despite the fact that the post-trial
proceedings in Steidl’s case were not yet over. Instead,
Callahan circulated the memo to three of the present
appellants: Carper, Parker and Fermon. Callahan wrote
additional memos to those three in July 2000 and August
2001; these too spelled out exculpatory evidence in the
state’s possession. Defendant Brueggemann was in-
formed about some of the exculpatory evidence at this
time. The memos admitted that the exculpatory evidence
No. 06-2017                                               5

was never disclosed to Steidl because “McFatridge did not
want any negative reports.” At one point during his
investigation, Callahan interviewed Eckerty’s wife, who
offered him a houseboat to spare Eckerty’s career.
  Carper, Parker, Fermon, and Brueggemann, newly
aware of the exculpatory evidence, actively blocked a
full investigation into Doe and instructed Callahan to
focus on other work. They also enlisted defendant
Kaupas to help discredit Callahan’s conclusions. As be-
fore, neither Steidl nor his lawyers learned anything of
this.
  In 2002, Steidl petitioned the Governor of Illinois for a
pardon on the basis of actual innocence. In January 2003,
the Governor’s office called Callahan and told him that
Steidl would be pardoned if Callahan’s investigation had
revealed his actual innocence. Callahan was ready to
make that representation, but he needed the consent of
the Illinois State Police before he could do so. He made
a presentation to defendants Fermon, Carper, and
Brueggemann in which he reported his conclusion that the
jury never heard the truth and that Steidl was in fact
innocent. He was persuaded, through his investigation,
that the only trial witnesses against Steidl had been
utterly discredited, that there were no other witnesses
or other credible evidence implicating Steidl in the mur-
ders, and that the available information suggested in-
stead that Doe was a more likely suspect. Callahan also
found evidence of wrongdoing by the initial investigating
team. After hearing Callahan’s presentation, defendants
Fermon, Carper, and Brueggemann decided not to allow
him to tell the Governor that he had concluded, based on
his investigation, that Steidl was innocent.
  Steidl’s next step was his habeas corpus petition in the
district court. As we noted earlier, he was finally success-
ful there. After his petition was granted, on May 27, 2005,
6                                              No. 06-2017

Steidl filed this § 1983 action against the City of Paris,
Illinois, numerous police officers, and State’s Attorney
McFatridge. The ISP Officials filed a motion to dismiss
on the basis of qualified immunity, among other things. On
March 31, 2006, the district court rejected their immunity
defense, and this appeal followed.

                            II
  The Supreme Court has established a two-step analysis
for assessing claims of qualified immunity. Saucier, 533
U.S. at 201. First, the court must determine whether the
official’s conduct violated a constitutional right. Second,
the court must determine whether the right was clearly
established at the time of the conduct. The second in-
quiry, the Court has stressed, must be conducted at the
correct level of specificity. It must be “clear to a reason-
able [official] that his conduct was unlawful in the situa-
tion he confronted” before immunity can be denied. Id.; see
also Harlow v. Fitzgerald, 457 U.S. 800, 818 (1982); Davis
v. Sherer, 468 U.S. 183, 191 (1984).
  The defendants offer two reasons why their conduct did
not meet these standards. First, they claim that Brady
does not apply to post-conviction proceedings; and second,
they urge that Brady applies only to prosecutors, not to
police officials, and whatever duty police officers may
have to disclose exculpatory evidence is limited to a duty
to disclose to the prosecutor. Both arguments relate to
the first Saucier step—whether the facts demonstrate a
constitutional violation at all—and so we begin our
analysis there. We then consider whether the rule on
which Steidl is relying was clearly established at the
relevant time.
No. 06-2017                                                7

                              A
  1. Applicability of Brady
  As we noted earlier, Steidl alleges that the defendants
“withh[eld]” and “suppress[ed]” from “Plaintiff ’s defense
attorneys, and the judges, juries, post trial prosecutors,
and the Governor and his staff, who were involved in
Plaintiff ’s criminal proceedings, the highly exculpatory and
exonerating” evidence and “obstruct[ed] investigations
which would have led to discovery of further exculpatory
evidence.” For present purposes, we must take these
allegations as true. Saucier, 533 U.S. at 201.
  The proposition that it is unconstitutional for law
enforcement officers to withhold or suppress exculpatory
evidence finds its roots in Brady. We therefore look at
that case first; it has been on the books since 1963 and
easily qualifies as clearly established law. The Brady
Court began by characterizing its holding as “an extension
of Mooney v. Holohan, 294 U.S. 103, 122 [(1935)],” which,
it noted with approval, had already been expanded in
Pyle v. Kansas, 317 U.S. 213, 215-16 (1942). Brady, 373
U.S. at 86. Pyle held unconstitutional “imprisonment
result[ing] from perjured testimony, knowingly used by
the State authorities to obtain [a] conviction, and from
the deliberate suppression by those same authorities of
evidence favorable to [the defendant].” Brady, 373 U.S. at
86 (quoting Pyle, 317 U.S. at 215-16).
  The holding of Brady was not as narrowly confined as
the ISP Officials would have it. The Court there held
that “the suppression by the prosecution of evidence
favorable to an accused upon request violates due process
where the evidence is material either to guilt or to punish-
ment, irrespective of the good faith or bad faith of the
prosecution.” 373 U.S. at 87 (emphasis added). This
holding mirrored the facts of the case. As the Court
recounted those facts, one of the exculpatory state-
8                                             No. 06-2017

ments “was withheld by the prosecution and did not come
to petitioner’s notice until after he had been tried, con-
victed, and sentenced, and after his conviction had been
affirmed.” Id. at 84 (emphasis added). The Maryland
courts had affirmed Brady’s conviction, and on post-
conviction review had refused to upset his conviction,
though they had ordered further proceedings on the
question of punishment. Id. at 84-85. That was the
posture of the case when the Supreme Court granted
certiorari. On those facts, the Court concluded that the
“suppression of [potentially exculpatory evidence] was a
violation of the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment.” Brady, 373 U.S. at 86. The fundamental
principle at stake, it emphasized, is the “avoidance of
an unfair trial to the accused.” Id. at 87.
  The Court has not retreated from these fundamental
principles in the cases that have followed Brady; to the
contrary, it has repeatedly underscored the breadth of the
Brady rule. Thus, for example, it held in United States v.
Bagley, 473 U.S. 667, 676 (1985), that Brady applies to
impeachment evidence as well as to direct evidence of
guilt. It has also made it clear that Brady’s principles
apply to evidence both in the hands of the police and in
the hands of the prosecutors. See Kyles v. Whitley, 514
U.S. 419 (1995).
  The defendants point to several decisions from other
courts for support for their argument that Brady does not
extend beyond the original trial. In one of those cases,
however, the court squarely rejected the proposition for
which the defendants are arguing. The only decision from
a court of appeals on which they rely is Gibson v. Superin-
tendent of N.J. Dep’t of Law & Pub. Safety, 411 F.3d 427
(3d Cir. 2005). In that case, plaintiff brought an action
under § 1983 against officials of the New Jersey State
Police claiming that his 1992 arrest on the New Jersey
No. 06-2017                                                9

Turnpike was racially motivated. 411 F.3d at 431. In
Gibson, however, the critical exculpatory materials were
not uncovered until November 2000. (The court’s opinion
does not clearly identify when the police first had enough
information to detect a pattern of racial profiling, as
opposed to actions by particular officers.) Although the
court commented that there is “no constitutional duty to
disclose potentially exculpatory evidence to a convicted
criminal after the criminal proceedings have concluded
and we decline to conclude that such a duty exists,” id. at
444, that statement must be taken in context. Unlike
Steidl’s case, where the state officials suppressed the
exculpatory evidence throughout every phase of the
state proceeding, in Gibson the state disclosed the ex-
culpatory evidence while his post-conviction proceeding
was on appeal to the Superior Court of New Jersey,
Appellate Division. The court also differentiated the
Gibson defendants’ failure to release general information
that might have been (and in hindsight was) exculpatory
for Gibson from a situation in which officials inten-
tionally suppressed exculpatory evidence known at the
time to be necessary for a convicted felon to obtain redress.
Id. at 445. Under those circumstances, the Third Circuit
held, Gibson was not entitled to pursue a § 1983 action
against the state officials.
  The district court cases on which the ISP Officials rely
also primarily address the question whether the state
has the duty to disclose exculpatory evidence that is
discovered after the trial is concluded. For that reason,
we see no need to discuss them. Steidl’s case is different.
Here, just as in Brady itself, and in the later decision in
Kyles v. Whitley, the evidence at issue was known to the
police before Steidl was brought to trial. (We recognize
that Kyles was decided after Steidl’s trial took place, and
so we mention it only for whatever light it throws on the
scope of the original Brady and Bagley cases, not as an
10                                              No. 06-2017

independent source of authority. Kyles was decided,
however, well before the ISP Officials learned of and
suppressed the exculpatory evidence here.) Brady dealt
with evidence that “did not come to petitioner’s notice until
after he had been tried, convicted, and sentenced, and
after his conviction had been affirmed.” 373 U.S. at 84. We
thus have no need here to decide whether disclosure of
exculpatory evidence discovered post-trial is required
under Brady; this case presents only the same question
as the Court addressed in Brady, namely, whether excul-
patory evidence discovered before or during trial must
be disclosed during post-conviction proceedings.
  At almost the same time as Steidl’s trial (and well before
the involvement of the ISP Officials) the Supreme Court
reiterated the fact that “the duty to disclose [exculpatory
material] is ongoing.” Pennsylvania v. Ritchie, 480 U.S. 39,
60 (1987). In that case, which dealt with a sensitive youth
service file containing materials about child abuse, the
Court eventually concluded that the defendant was
entitled to know whether information in the file might
have changed the outcome of his trial, but that the proper
procedure to use was an initial in camera inspection by
the trial court. Id. at 61. The Tenth and Eleventh Cir-
cuits have viewed Ritchie as extending the duty of disclo-
sure of evidence available for the trial to “all stages of
the judicial process.” Smith v. Roberts, 115 F.3d 818, 820
(10th Cir. 1997) (“We also agree, and the State concedes,
that the duty to disclose is ongoing and extends to all
stages of the judicial process,” citing Ritchie); High v.
Head, 209 F.3d 1257, 1265, n.8 (11th Cir. 2001) (noting
that Ritchie establishes that the state’s duty to dis-
close exculpatory materials is ongoing and citing with
approval an opinion stating that the duty extends through-
out the habeas corpus stage). By contrast, the Gibson
court made no mention of Ritchie, which makes sense
because that court was not discussing the duty to dis-
No. 06-2017                                              11

close exculpatory evidence that was available, but not
disclosed, at trial.
  In our view, Brady, Ritchie, and the other cases in this
line impose on the state an ongoing duty to disclose
exculpatory information if, as Brady put it, that evidence
is material either to guilt or to punishment and avail-
able for the trial. (The latter qualification is important,
to the extent that Brady identifies a trial right, as the ISP
Officials argue and as this court characterized it in
Newsome v. McCabe, 256 F.3d 747, 752 (7th Cir. 2001).)
For evidence known to the state at the time of the trial,
the duty to disclose extends throughout the legal proceed-
ings that may affect either guilt or punishment, including
post-conviction proceedings. Put differently, the taint on
the trial that took place continues throughout the pro-
ceedings, and thus the duty to disclose and allow cor-
rection of that taint continues. We cannot accept the
implicit premise of the state’s position here, which is
that Brady leaves state officials free to conceal evidence
from reviewing courts or post-conviction courts with
impunity, even if that concealment results in the wrong-
ful conviction of an innocent person. It is worth recalling,
in this connection, that the Brady rule was derived from
the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
“Society wins,” the Court wrote, “not only when the
guilty are convicted but when criminal trials are fair; our
system of the administration of justice suffers when any
accused is treated unfairly.” 373 U.S. at 87.

  2. Duty of police officers to disclose
  The second argument that the ISP Officials press is that
the Brady duty does not extend to police officers, or at
most, it requires only that they disclose evidence to
prosecutors. From this, they reason that police officers
can never be liable under § 1983 for a failure to disclose.
12                                              No. 06-2017

The most obvious flaw in this argument is the fact that
Steidl’s complaint alleges that the ISP Officials indeed did
fail to disclose the exculpatory evidence to, among others,
the “judges, juries, post trial prosecutors, and the Governor
and his staff.” (Emphasis added.) Steidl did not allege
that the ISP Officials had a direct duty to disclose the
evidence to his attorney. Rather, consistently with the
defense theory, he alleged in effect that the ISP Officials
failed in their duty to disclose the evidence to a competent
authority. See Brady v. Dill, 187 F.3d 104, 114 (1st Cir.
1999) (holding that police officers have a duty to report
exculpatory evidence to a “competent authority”). As the
Third Circuit recognized in Gibson, the case on which the
defendants rely so heavily,
     Several circuits have recognized that police officers
     and other state actors may be liable under § 1983 for
     failing to disclose exculpatory information to the
     prosecutor. . . . We agree. Although Brady places the
     ultimate duty of disclosure on the prosecutor, it would
     be anomalous to say that police officers are not liable
     when they affirmatively conceal material evidence
     from the prosecutor.
411 F.3d at 443.
  The Supreme Court considers it so well established
that the duty to disclose is one held by the state or gov-
ernment as a whole that its most recent comment occurs in
a short per curiam opinion. See Youngblood v. West
Virginia, 126 S. Ct. 2188 (2006). In Youngblood, a crim-
inal defendant alleged a Brady violation after a police
investigator instructed another person to discard poten-
tially exculpatory evidence without disclosing it. Id. at
2189. Stating that “[a] Brady violation occurs when the
government fails to disclose evidence materially favorable
to the accused . . . even evidence that is known only to
police investigators and not to the prosecutor,” id. at 2190
No. 06-2017                                                 13

(emphasis added), the Court held that Youngblood “clearly
presented a federal constitutional Brady claim.” Id.
at 2190.
  Even before Youngblood, this court reached a similar
conclusion. In Newsome, we had this to say:
    we make the normal immunity inquiry: was it clearly
    established in 1979 and 1980 that police could not
    withhold from prosecutors exculpatory information
    about fingerprints and the conduct of a lineup? The
    answer is yes: The Brady principle was announced
    in 1963, and we applied it in Jones [v. Chicago, 856
    F.2d 985 (7th Cir. 1988)] to affirm a hefty award of
    damages against officers who withheld exculpatory
    information in 1981.
256 F.3d at 752-53 (citations omitted). Newsome also
explained that “[i]f officers are not candid with prosecu-
tors, then the prosecutors’ decisions . . . are not the
important locus of action. Pressure must be brought to
bear elsewhere. . . . Requiring culpable officers to pay
damages to the victims of their actions . . . holds out
promise of both deterring and remediating violations of the
Constitution.” Newsome, 256 F.3d at 752. Newsome
therefore held that police officers who withhold evidence
cannot hide from liability behind the fact that “the prose-
cutor [withheld the evidence, so] . . . they either are not
liable or possess a derivative form of immunity.” Id.
  Other circuits agree with this general analysis of the
issue. Thus, in Brady v. Dill, the First Circuit held that
while the officers before it were entitled to qualified
immunity, an officer’s “fail[ure] to apprise the prosecutor
or a judicial officer of known exculpatory information [can
be a] . . . constitutional wrong. . . [especially] when a police
officer acts as an information provider.” 187 F.3d at 114.
To similar effect, the Eleventh Circuit ruled that “[i]nvesti-
gators satisfy their obligations under Brady when they
14                                              No. 06-2017

turn exculpatory and impeachment evidence over to the
prosecutor,” necessarily implying that Brady applies to
investigators. McMillian v. Johnson, 88 F.3d 1554, 1567
(11th Cir. 1996).
  The lone case that the ISP Officials cite in support of
the idea that police officers violate due process “only if
they deliberately withhold or conceal exculpatory evidence
from the prosecutor” is the Northern District of Illinois
decision in Newsome v. James, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS
16888, *13-14. Aside from the fact that district court
decisions are nonprecedential, the court appears to have
been focusing on the presumed inability of police officers
to make sophisticated legal decisions about materiality. It
also said, interestingly, that the police officers “simply
have to refrain from concealing exculpatory evidence.” Id.
That, of course, is precisely what the ISP Officials here
did not do. We therefore do not find anything in the district
court’s Newsome opinion that would persuade us to
reconsider our own conclusion, directed by the precedent
of the Supreme Court, our own court, and other circuit
courts. Police officers have a duty to disclose under Brady.
   Our opinion in Jones v. Chicago, supra, supports this
conclusion. There we held that supervisors may be liable
for their subordinates’ violation of others’ constitutional
rights when they “know about the conduct and facilitate
it, approve it, condone it, or turn a blind eye for fear of
what they might see. They must in other words act
either knowingly or with deliberate, reckless indifference.”
856 F.2d at 992-93. As the court described the case,
“[t]here was . . . enough evidence to enable the jury to
infer that [the defendants] had known every false step
taken by the subordinate officers, had approved every false
step, and had done their part to make the scheme work,”
as one supervisor “deep-six[ed]” a subordinate’s report,
another “tried to put [a subordinate] off the scent” and
another “sign[ed] a deceitful report for use by the prosecu-
No. 06-2017                                               15

tion.” Id. We too are faced with a scenario in which
supervisors perpetuated other officers’ misconduct.
  We conclude, therefore, that Steidl has satisfied step
one of the Saucier inquiry, because he has alleged facts
that, if true, show a constitutional violation on the part of
the ISP Officials.

                             B
   What remains is the question whether this right was
clearly established, at the requisite level of specificity, at
the time the ISP Officials acted. A plaintiff can show that
a right is “clearly established” by statute or constitution
in at least two ways: (1) he can point to an analogous
case establishing the right to be free from the conduct at
issue; or (2) he can show that the conduct was “so egre-
gious that no reasonable person could have believed that
it would not violate clearly established rights.” Smith v.
City of Chicago, 242 F.3d 737, 742 (7th Cir. 2001).
  We have found no case that is directly analogous to the
alleged misconduct of the police here. (This is essentially
good news: we sincerely hope that this type of behavior is
rare.) We therefore must decide whether the alleged
actions were “so egregious” that no reasonable person
could have believed that they were permissible. This is
the approach that the Supreme Court took in its decis-
ions in United States v. Lanier, 520 U.S. 259, 265 (1997),
and Hope v. Pelzer, 536 U.S. 730, 740 (2002), both of
which focused on whether a reasonable person would
know that the challenged behavior violated a constitu-
tional right and held that there need not be case law on
point so long as the official had “fair warning” that her
conduct was impermissible. See also Burgess v. Lowery,
201 F.3d 942, 946 (7th Cir. 2000).
  In urging this court not to dispense with the need to find
a closely analogous case, the ISP Officials rely on Denius
16                                             No. 06-2017

v. Dunlap, 209 F.3d 944, 951 (7th Cir. 2000), which held
that “[i]n some rare cases, where the constitutional
violation is patently obvious, the plaintiff may not be
required to present the court with any analogous cases.”
Id. at 951. But Denius’s use of the word “rare” did not
mean that the second route should normally be closed. To
the contrary, Denius noted that “widespread compliance
with a clearly apparent law may have prevented the
issue from previously being litigated.” Denius, 209 F.3d
at 951.
   We are persuaded that the ISP Officials, and indeed
all of the police officers involved in this case, had ample
notice that the knowing suppression of exculpatory
material that was in the files at the time of the trial
violated the defendant’s constitutional rights. If, as we
held in Newsome, the duty to disclose was clearly estab-
lished as of 1979 and 1980, then it remained clearly
established at Steidl’s initial trial in 1987 and throughout
his post-trial proceedings. Supervisors in the Illinois
State Police cannot have thought that they were per-
mitted deliberately to obstruct the access to this evidence
of the post-conviction court and the Governor’s Office,
which has its own role to play in the state’s criminal
justice system. By the time these officials acted, Kyles v.
Whitley was also on the books, eliminating any doubt about
the joint responsibility of the police and prosecutors to
assure the fair administration of the criminal justice
system. Much of our discussion of the scope of the right
Steidl is asserting applies with equal force to the question
whether that right was clearly established, as we have
taken care to rely on cases and doctrines that were in
place before these officials acted. We therefore conclude
that the district court correctly denied the ISP Officials’
motion for dismissal based on qualified immunity.
No. 06-2017                                               17

                            III
   Last, we consider the ISP Officials’ challenge to Steidl’s
claim of denial of access to the courts. Here, they argue in
the alternative that this claim cannot pass the first
element of the Saucier test, and that it fails to state a
claim upon which relief can be granted. Our jurisdiction
is secure for at least the first of these theories, and thus
we need not consider the second. In Christopher v.
Harbury, 536 U.S. 403 (2002), the Supreme Court ad-
dressed the question of how to allege a claim concerning
access to the courts. Steidl alleges a “backward-looking”
claim, which means he is seeking redress for “[s]pecific
litigation [that] ended poorly.” Id. at 414-15. Consistently
with general pleading rules under the Federal Rules of
Civil Procedure, Christopher requires something sufficient
to give the defendant “fair notice” of the access claim,
including the identification of the underlying claim that
was lost; a description of the “official acts frustrating the
litigation”; and the identification of a “remedy that may
be awarded as recompense but not otherwise available
in some suit that may yet be brought.” Id. at 415-16. The
ISP Officials contend that Steidl never lost a suit nor does
he seek a remedy that is otherwise unavailable.
  Steidl points to two claims that he lost: first, his
amended post-conviction petition in state court, which
was ultimately denied, and second, his effort to obtain a
pardon based on actual innocence from the Governor. The
official action causing this loss, he asserts, was the defen-
dants’ perpetuation of the concealment of exculpatory
evidence. Steidl claims that the “four long years in prison
between the time Defendants learned of the exculpatory
information and the time he was ultimately released . . .
satisfies the Christopher requirement of a ‘remedy that
may be awarded as recompense but not otherwise available
in some suit that may yet be brought.’ ”
18                                              No. 06-2017

  Even if we were to agree with Steidl that he lost two
suits (and we make no ruling on that), his access claim
founders on the second requirement. He would like to
be compensated for the additional time he spent in
prison after the ISP Officials became aware of the ex-
culpatory evidence and facilitated its suppression and
for the resources he spent on a futile post-conviction relief
process, and he has also requested punitive damages and
attorneys’ fees. This is essentially the same relief, how-
ever, that he would receive if he eventually prevails on
his claim for false imprisonment (Count I) and his claim
against the City of Paris (Count V). He is therefore not
asking for any remedy relating to the denial of access to
courts that he cannot “still . . . obtain[] through another
procedure.” Christopher, 536 U.S. at 415. Because Steidl’s
allegations, even if taken as true, do not show a constitu-
tional violation, the district court erred in concluding
otherwise.

                            IV
  We AFFIRM the district court’s denial of the defendants’
qualified immunity defense for Count II. We REVERSE
the district court’s denial of the defendants’ motion to
dismiss as it relates to Count III. The case is REMANDED
to the district court for further proceedings consistent
with this opinion.

A true Copy:
      Teste:

                        ________________________________
                        Clerk of the United States Court of
                          Appeals for the Seventh Circuit

                   USCA-02-C-0072—7-18-07