Frank Noonan v. Kathleen Kane

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJuly 12, 2022
Docket20-3610
StatusUnpublished

This text of Frank Noonan v. Kathleen Kane (Frank Noonan v. Kathleen Kane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frank Noonan v. Kathleen Kane, (3d Cir. 2022).

Opinion

NOT PRECEDENTIAL

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT ______________

Nos. 20-3610 and 20-3614 ______________

FRANK NOONAN; RANDY FEATHERS; RICHARD A. SHEETZ, JR.; E. MARC COSTANZO; FRANK FINA, Appellants

v.

KATHLEEN KANE; MICHAEL MILETTO; CHRISTOPHER BRENNAN; PHILADELPHIA DAILY NEWS; PHILADELPHIA MEDIA NETWORK (DIGITAL) LLC; PHILADELPHIA MEDIA NETWORK, LLC

E. Marc Costanzo, Appellant in No. 20-3610

FRANK NOONAN; RANDY FEATHERS; RICHARD A. SHEETZ, JR.; E. MARC COSTANZO; FRANK FINA

KATHLEEN KANE; MICHAEL MILETTO; CHRISTOPHER BRENNAN; PHILADELPHIA DAILY NEWS; PHILADELPHIA MEDIA NETWORK (DIGITAL) LLC; PHILADELPHIA MEDIA NETWORK, LLC

Frank Noonan; Randy Feathers; Richard A. Sheetz, Jr.; Frank Fina, Appellants in No. 20-3614 ______________

APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA (Civ. No. 2-15-cv-06082) District Judge: Honorable Harvey Bartle, III ______________ Submitted Under Third Circuit L.A.R. 34.1(a) October 28, 2021 ______________

Before: GREENAWAY, JR., KRAUSE, and PHIPPS, Circuit Judges.

(Opinion Filed: July 12, 2022)

______________

OPINION* ______________ GREENAWAY, JR., Circuit Judge.

The genesis of this dispute, between an elected official and former government

employees who disagreed with her, is a war of words waged in the press—that is to say,

politics as usual. Because the objectionable conduct took the form of statements to the

media, liability will attach only if the public officials who are defendants in this case

imposed or threatened official action. The District Court determined, and we agree, that

the Appellants either failed to allege such actions or failed to adduce evidence to satisfy

this burden. Accordingly, we will affirm the District Court’s partial grant of Appellees’

motion to dismiss and grant of summary judgment in Appellees’ favor.

I. BACKGROUND

This appeal arises out of claims by former employees of the Office of the Attorney

General of Pennsylvania (the “OAG”) that the former Attorney General, Kathleen Kane,

* This disposition is not an opinion of the full Court and pursuant to I.O.P. 5.7 does not constitute binding precedent.

2 and an investigator in the OAG, Michael Miletto, retaliated against them for exercising

their First Amendment rights to criticize Kane in the press and testify before a grand jury.

Appellants Frank Noonan, Randy P. Feathers, Richard A. Sheetz, Jr., E. Marc

Costanzo, and Frank G. Fina were previously employed by the OAG as law enforcement

officers or prosecutors. Appellants were all, in one way or another, involved in the

OAG’s investigation of child sexual abuse perpetrated by a Pennsylvania State University

football coach, Jerry Sandusky.

Kane, in her 2012 campaign for Attorney General, made statements critical of the

Sandusky investigation and promised to conduct an independent inquiry into the

investigation if she were to be elected. Those statements became the opening volleys of a

heated battle between Kane and Appellants. Apparently in response to criticism from

Appellants in the media, Kane engaged in a retaliatory campaign against them that

included making defamatory statements in the media, conducting internal investigations

of matters Appellants worked on, allegedly directing current and former employees of the

OAG to deliver threats to Appellants, and ultimately disclosing to the media sealed grand

jury materials.

KANE’S STATEMENTS AND OAG INVESTIGATIONS OF APPELLANTS

After taking office, Kane appointed H. Geoffrey Moulton, Jr., to review the

OAG’s investigation of Sandusky. During his investigation, Moulton discovered a cache

of pornographic emails exchanged among OAG employees assigned to the Sandusky

investigation. These emails, Appellants allege, were later wielded against them in an

attempt to secure their silence. The OAG published Moulton’s report on June 23, 2014,

3 with no mention of the emails. At a press conference held the same day, Kane falsely

suggested that the pace of the Sandusky investigation permitted Sandusky to abuse two

other victims.

Unlike the other Appellants, Fina’s term in the OAG overlapped with Kane’s for

three days.1 In that brief time, Fina did the following—he alerted Kane to her potential

conflict of interest with an ongoing investigation of members of the Pennsylvania

General Assembly and advised her to recuse herself. Kane declined to recuse herself, did

not bring forth any charges in connection with the investigation, and directed a review of

the investigation. In statements to the press, Kane criticized the investigation as, among

other things, being tainted by racial targeting of Black legislators.

A March 16, 2014 article in the Philadelphia Inquirer identified a confidential

source in the investigation and published Kane’s purported conflict of interest. Fina’s

prior comments about the case were quoted in the March 16 story and he responded to

Kane’s criticism by challenging her to a public debate on the facts. In email

correspondence about the March 16 story, Kane declared to her outside media consultant

that she would not allow those involved with the story to discredit the OAG and that the

story signaled “war.” The consultant responded that Kane would be wise to wage war

with Fina and not the Inquirer.

On March 19, 2014, Miletto relayed to David Peifer, Special Agent in Charge of

the Bureau of Special Investigations in the OAG, that he knew of an investigation that

1 Before Kane took office, Noonan, Feathers, Sheetz, and Costanzo had all left the OAG.

4 would also receive media coverage. On March 21, Peifer met with Miletto at Kane’s

request. Miletto relayed information about an aborted grand jury investigation into

allegations of financial impropriety by the then-head of the Philadelphia Chapter of the

NAACP, J. Whyatt Mondesire, in connection with a state-funded job training program

(the “CUES-Mondesire investigation”).2

Kane, through a subordinate, handed over documents relating to the CUES-

Mondesire investigation to Christopher Brennan of the Philadelphia Daily News.

Brennan used the documents to write an article which appeared on June 6, 2014. These

documents included confidential material from a grand jury inquiry into the matter.

Appellants allege that this article was published at Kane’s direction and was written to

suggest that they improperly terminated the CUES-Mondesire investigation.

In early July, the OAG began to receive Pennsylvania Right-to-Know-Law

(“RTKL”) requests for the pornographic emails discovered during Moulton’s

investigation. Several of these requests asked for the emails of specific OAG employees,

including Fina, Noonan, Feathers, and Costanzo. Multiple reporters reached out to Fina,

advising him that the OAG had suggested the media file RTKL requests for Appellants’

emails.

The OAG retained an outside attorney, Sara Yerger, to review the RTKL requests.

That September, Yerger sent letters to reporters denying the RTKL requests. On

2 Miletto led the investigation and clashed with Fina and Costanzo over their failure to bring charges against Mondesire. Miletto was subsequently transferred out of the Criminal Prosecutions section of the OAG.

5 September 23, 2014, Kane emailed her media consultant an article reporting the denial of

the RTKL requests by Yerger.

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