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No. 10553008
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Anthony Defrancesco v. Robert C. Robbins
No. 10553008 · Decided May 7, 2025
No. 10553008·Ninth Circuit · 2025·
FlawFinder last updated this page Apr. 2, 2026
Case Details
Court
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Decided
May 7, 2025
Citation
No. 10553008
Disposition
See opinion text.
Full Opinion
FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
No. 23-16147
ANTHONY T. DEFRANCESCO,
D.C. No.
Plaintiff-Appellant,
4:20-cv-00011-
CKJ
v.
ROBERT C. ROBBINS, in his
OPINION
individual capacity; MICHAEL D.
DAKE, in his individual capacity;
UNKNOWN PARTIES, named as and
does 1-10 inclusive,
Defendants-Appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the District of Arizona
Cindy K. Jorgenson, District Judge, Presiding
Argued and Submitted August 21, 2024
San Francisco, CA
Filed May 7, 2025
Before: Marsha S. Berzon, Daniel A. Bress, and Lawrence
VanDyke, Circuit Judges.
Per Curiam Opinion;
Concurrence by Judge Berzon
2 DEFRANCESCO V. ROBBINS
SUMMARY*
First Amendment/Qualified Immunity
The panel affirmed the district court’s dismissal on
qualified immunity grounds of Anthony DeFrancesco’s
complaint alleging that he was harassed and then fired from
his position as the Senior Director of Operations at the
University of Arizona Health Sciences division (“UAHS”)
in retaliation for his husband’s whistleblowing speech, in
violation of the First Amendment.
DeFrancesco’s husband, who had earlier also held a high
position at the University of Arizona as Senior Vice
President and Chief Financial Officer, opposed the UAHS’s
hiring of Michael Dake to serve as UAHS Senior Vice
President. After Dake was hired, DeFrancesco’s husband
voluntarily left his position with the
University. DeFrancesco contends that Dake harassed and
subsequently terminated him from his position because of
his husband’s speech. DeFrancesco sued Dake and
University President Robert Robbins, alleging that they
infringed upon his First Amendment right to be free from
retaliation for his husband’s allegedly protected
whistleblowing speech.
The panel held that defendants were entitled to qualified
immunity because it was not clearly established at the time
of DeFrancesco’s termination in June 2019 that defendants’
adverse treatment of DeFrancesco on account of his
husband’s speech violated the First Amendment. In so
*
This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
DEFRANCESCO V. ROBBINS 3
holding, the panel left for another day the merits of the
underlying constitutional question of whether a public
employee has constitutional protection from retaliation
based on a close family member’s speech, in this case a
family member who is also a public employee.
Concurring, Judge Berzon wrote separately to explain
that although the familial antiretaliation protection under the
First Amendment was not clearly established at the time of
DeFrancesco’s termination, she would reach the first prong
of the qualified immunity analysis and hold that such
protection is well-grounded in Supreme Court and Ninth
Circuit precedent. Judge Berzon would conclude that,
taking the facts alleged in DeFrancesco’s complaint as true
and drawing all reasonable inferences in his favor,
defendants violated DeFrancesco’s constitutional protection
against retaliation for his husband’s speech.
COUNSEL
Lauren M. Brody (argued), David W. Schecter, and Louis R.
Miller, Miller Barondess LLP, Los Angeles, California;
Jonathan A. Dessaules, Dessaules Law Group, Phoenix,
Arizona; for Plaintiff-Appellant.
Daniel G. Dowd (argued), Cole K. Kubosumi, and Rebecca
van Doren, Cohen Dowd Quigley, Phoenix, Arizona, for
Defendants-Appellees.
4 DEFRANCESCO V. ROBBINS
OPINION
PER CURIAM:
From 2015 to 2019, Anthony DeFrancesco served as the
Senior Director of Operations at the University of Arizona
Health Sciences division. DeFrancesco’s husband had
earlier also held a high position at the University, as Senior
Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. DeFrancesco
contends that he was harassed and then fired from his job in
retaliation for his husband’s whistleblowing speech.
DeFrancesco sued his supervisor and the president of the
University of Arizona (“Officials”), alleging the Officials’s
retaliation for his husband’s speech violated the First
Amendment. At the motion to dismiss stage, the Officials
invoked qualified immunity, arguing that First Amendment
protection of public employees from retaliation because of a
relative’s speech is not clearly established. The district court
agreed and dismissed DeFrancesco’s complaint.
We affirm. The Officials are entitled to qualified
immunity, as it was not clearly established at the time of
DeFrancesco’s termination in June 2019 that the Officials’s
adverse treatment of DeFrancesco on account of his
husband’s speech violated the First Amendment. In so
holding, we leave for another day the merits of the
underlying constitutional question—whether a public
employee has constitutional protection from retaliation
based on a close family member’s speech, in this case a
family member who is also a public employee.
DEFRANCESCO V. ROBBINS 5
BACKGROUND1
A
The University of Arizona Health Sciences (“UAHS”) is
a prominent academic medical center and public health
department within the University of Arizona. Plaintiff
Anthony DeFrancesco was the Senior Director of Operations
at UAHS from 2015 to 2019; he eventually oversaw a budget
in excess of $1 billion and served as the functional head of
human resources for a staff of over 500 people. For most of
this period, DeFrancesco’s husband, Gregg Goldman, was a
Senior Vice President and the Chief Financial Officer
(“CFO”) for the University.
In 2017, University President Robert Robbins put
together a search committee to find a new Senior Vice
President (“SVP”) to run UAHS. Robbins requested that the
University hire a particular executive search firm, Russell
Reynolds, to assist the search committee. Several high-
ranking employees of Russell Reynolds were close personal
friends of Robbins. Goldman volunteered to serve as co-
chair of the search committee.
Robbins encouraged Defendant Michael Dake to apply
for the open SVP position. Robbins and Dake are both
surgeons; they had worked together and attended medical
conferences, athletic events, and music concerts together
1
The facts in this section are drawn from allegations in the complaint.
As this appeal comes to the Court from the district court’s grant of a
motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim, the Court assumes the facts
alleged in the complaint are true and construes the complaint in the light
most favorable to DeFrancesco. See Gilstrap v. United Air Lines, Inc.,
709 F.3d 995, 998 n.1 (9th Cir. 2013).
6 DEFRANCESCO V. ROBBINS
over the years. Robbins calls Dake his “longest, best and
dearest friend.”
The University received many applications for the open
SVP position. Dake entered the process late and did not
perform well in his first interview. At the end of the initial
round of interviews, Goldman drove Robbins to the airport.
During the drive, in response to Robbins’s inquiry, Goldman
explained that Dake had performed poorly in his interview
with the committee members and that the committee likely
would not move him forward. Robbins replied that he was
not concerned because it was “taken care of that Dake would
be hired.”
Later that same day, the committee members had a
“robust discussion” about all the candidates, including Dake.
A straw vote indicated Dake would not be advanced to the
next round of consideration. But the committee members
were concerned that voting Dake down might hurt their
careers. At the suggestion of representatives from Russell
Reynolds, the committee conducted an anonymous vote to
avoid potential career repercussions. After tallying the votes,
the Russell Reynolds representatives announced that Dake
was one of the finalists. The committee members were
surprised and asked the firm to disclose the vote counts. The
firm refused. After some pressure, one of the firm’s
representatives said that “the vote had turned out how
President Robbins wanted.”
Dake’s follow-up interview didn’t go any better than the
first. Interviewers concluded that, among other things, he
lacked an understanding of the academic part of the job; had
minimal experience running an academic department; was
overconfident; and had allegedly engaged in unethical
billing and research practices in the past. Goldman conveyed
DEFRANCESCO V. ROBBINS 7
these results and the (anonymous) views of the committee
members to Robbins, who nevertheless declared Dake to be
among the two finalists for the open position.
On March 2, 2018, Robbins met with other senior
University officials, including Goldman, to discuss the SVP
search. Robbins announced that he would extend an offer to
Dake. Goldman spoke next, expressing concerns about the
integrity of the hiring process. He stated that he believed the
entire process was pre-planned by Robbins and that hiring
Dake would be a serious mistake. According to
DeFrancesco’s complaint, Goldman was “blowing the
whistle on an important issue for the community: corruption
and abuse at the highest levels of the State’s largest public
university.” The complaint states that Goldman did so in his
capacity “as a private citizen, not as the CFO of the
University and not as the co-chair of the search committee.”
Other officials also expressed concerns about Dake.
Robbins grew angry and wondered how he could “take
it back,” as he had “finally convinced [Dake] to apply and in
essence ha[d] already offered him the job.” Robbins then
stormed out. His senior advisor said she had never seen him
so angry and that Goldman and the others should be worried
for their jobs.
In March 2018, Robbins hired Dake to serve as SVP of
UAHS, which he celebrated as getting the “band back
together again.” Robbins told Dake that Goldman had firmly
advocated against Dake’s candidacy. Robbins also told Dake
that Goldman’s husband, DeFrancesco, was a UAHS
executive and that Dake had the authority to fire him.
DeFrancesco had performed well during his tenure at
UAHS, never receiving a complaint. But the tide began to
turn after Dake became SVP of UAHS. With no explanation,
8 DEFRANCESCO V. ROBBINS
Dake told DeFrancesco he was fired and had to “reapply” for
his job. Though DeFrancesco was not in fact let go at that
point, Dake continued to subject DeFrancesco to targeting
and harassment. Goldman complained to Robbins on behalf
of DeFrancesco, and Robbins represented that he would
handle the problem by speaking with Dake. But the targeting
did not stop.
After that, Goldman voluntarily left the University. In
October 2018, Dake refused to promote DeFrancesco to a
position whose responsibilities DeFrancesco was already
performing. Dake told DeFrancesco that now that his
husband had left, DeFrancesco had a “decision to make,” a
statement DeFrancesco interpreted to mean that he was not
welcome at UAHS as long as Dake was in charge.
Dake continued to make life difficult for DeFrancesco,
undermining him in meetings with high-level executives,
ignoring him, and circumventing him by communicating
directly with his subordinates. After months of such
treatment, Dake formally terminated DeFrancesco, effective
June 30, 2019.
B
In January 2020, DeFrancesco sued Robbins and Dake,2
alleging that they infringed upon DeFrancesco’s First
Amendment right to be free from retaliation for his
husband’s allegedly protected whistleblowing speech.3
2
Doe defendants were also named, along with the Arizona Board of
Regents.
3
In addition to his First Amendment claim, DeFrancesco alleged that the
individual Defendants denied him equal protection by harassing and
terminating him on account of his sexual orientation, and that the
DEFRANCESCO V. ROBBINS 9
DeFrancesco originally styled this claim as a violation of his
First Amendment right of association with his spouse.
Robbins and Dake moved to dismiss DeFrancesco’s
complaint, arguing that DeFrancesco had failed to state a
claim under the First Amendment and also invoking
qualified immunity. The district court granted the motion.
The court held, first, that DeFrancesco had not demonstrated
that he had a clearly-established First Amendment
associational right to be free from retaliation for the
protected speech of his spouse. The district court
acknowledged that some circuits and district courts had
“found that retaliation against a public employee for the
speech of a close family member violates the right to
freedom of association,” but concluded that “neither the
Supreme Court nor the Ninth Circuit have clearly delineated
the parameters of associational rights vis-à-vis a First
Amendment retaliation claim.” The district court also held
that even if such a right were clearly established, Goldman’s
speech was not protected. According to the district court,
Goldman spoke pursuant to his official duties on individual
personnel manners, not as a citizen on a matter of public
concern. Given these determinations, the district court
concluded, Robbins and Dake were entitled to qualified
immunity.
DeFrancesco appealed the ruling to this court. See
DeFrancesco v. Ariz. Bd. of Regents, No. 21-16530, 2023
Arizona Board of Regents had discriminated against him on the basis of
sex because of his sexual orientation, in violation of Title VII of the Civil
Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e, et seq. These claims were
dismissed, and their dismissal was affirmed on appeal. See DeFrancesco
v. Ariz. Bd. of Regents, No. 21-16530, 2023 WL 313209 (9th Cir. Jan.
19, 2023). The Arizona Board of Regents is no longer a defendant.
10 DEFRANCESCO V. ROBBINS
WL 313209 (9th Cir. Jan. 19, 2023). We held, among other
things, that the district court abused its discretion by denying
DeFrancesco leave to amend his First Amendment claim to
clarify whether Goldman was engaged in protected
whistleblowing speech, and remanded the case for further
proceedings. Id. at *2.
On remand, DeFrancesco filed a Second Amended
Complaint (“SAC”) alleging that Goldman spoke as a
whistleblower on cronyism and corruption at UAHS. Also,
whereas DeFrancesco’s initial complaint asserted that
Robbins and Dake had violated his First Amendment right
of association by retaliating against him for his husband’s
First Amendment-protected speech, the SAC did not
mention a right of association and instead asserted that
Robbins and Dake violated the First Amendment by
“harass[ing] and retaliat[ing]” against DeFrancesco because
of his husband’s protected speech.
The district court granted Robbins and Dake’s second
motion to dismiss, again based on qualified immunity. This
time, the court held that the SAC alleged facts sufficient to
plausibly allege that Goldman spoke as a citizen on a matter
of public concern. But it once again held that there was “no
persuasive law that clearly establishes that a First
Amendment retaliation claim may be made by one person
for the protected speech of another person based on a close
personal relationship between the two.” The district court
also noted that the SAC did not assert the violation of a First
Amendment right of association, and so did “not revisit its
prior determination that there is no clearly established right
of association under the First Amendment governing the
circumstances of this case.”
DEFRANCESCO V. ROBBINS 11
DISCUSSION
We review de novo a district court’s dismissal under Fed.
R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6), “accepting as true all allegations of fact
in a well-pleaded complaint and construing those facts in the
light most favorable to the plaintiff.” Sampson v. Cnty. of
L.A. ex rel. L.A. Cnty. Dep’t of Child. & Fam. Servs., 974
F.3d 1012, 1018 (9th Cir. 2020) (quoting Karam v. City of
Burbank, 352 F.3d 1188, 1192 (9th Cir. 2003)). And we
review de novo a district court’s decision on qualified
immunity. Id.
In assessing whether qualified immunity applies, we
consider whether (1) the plaintiff has plausibly alleged a
violation of a constitutional right, and (2) the constitutional
right was “clearly established” at the time of the alleged
misconduct. Ballentine v. Tucker, 28 F.4th 54, 61 (9th Cir.
2022) (quoting District of Columbia v. Wesby, 583 U.S. 48,
62-63 (2018)). We may exercise our “sound discretion in
deciding which of the two prongs of the qualified immunity
analysis should be addressed first.” Id. (quoting Pearson v.
Callahan, 555 U.S. 223, 236 (2009)). As we conclude that
DeFrancesco’s constitutional protection from retaliation for
a relative’s speech was not clearly established by the time of
his termination in June 2019, we do not reach the
constitutional violation prong.
To meet the “clearly established” requirement, the law at
the time of the conduct must have been “sufficiently clear”
that every “reasonable official would have understood that
what he is doing” was unlawful. Ashcroft v. al-Kidd, 563
U.S. 731, 741 (2011) (quoting Anderson v. Creighton, 483
U.S. 635, 640 (1987)). In other words, “the focus is on
whether the officer had fair notice that her conduct was
unlawful, . . . judged against the backdrop of the law at the
12 DEFRANCESCO V. ROBBINS
time of the conduct.” Evans v. Skolnik, 997 F.3d 1060, 1066
(9th Cir. 2021) (quoting Brosseau v. Haugen, 543 U.S. 194,
198 (2004)).
A constitutional right may be “clearly established by
controlling authority or a robust consensus of cases of
persuasive authority.” Tuuamalemalo v. Greene, 946 F.3d
471, 477 (9th Cir. 2019) (citing Wesby, 583 U.S. at 63); see
also Waid v. County of Lyon, 87 F.4th 383, 388 (9th Cir.
2023); Hopson v. Alexander, 71 F.4th 692, 697 (9th Cir.
2023).4 There is no binding precedent in this court governing
the issue at stake here. In this circumstance, courts in this
circuit may look to other decisional law, “including relevant
decisions of other circuits, state courts, and district courts.”
Moonin v. Tice, 868 F.3d 853, 868 (9th Cir. 2017); see also
Evans, 997 F.3d at 1066.
Not just any decisional law will do. “We have been
somewhat hesitant to rely on district court decisions,” Evans,
997 F.3d at 1067, for example, because they “do not
necessarily settle constitutional standards,” id. (quoting
Camreta v. Greene, 563 U.S. 692, 709 n.7 (2011)). And
though we “have held that unpublished decisions . . . may
inform our qualified immunity analysis,” rarely have we
concluded, “absent any published opinions on point or
overwhelming obviousness of illegality,” that “the law was
clearly established on the basis of unpublished decisions
only.” Sorrels v. McKee, 290 F.3d 965, 971 (9th Cir. 2002).
Further, as the Supreme Court has repeatedly stated, clearly
established law may not be defined “at a high level of
4
On “rare” occasions, a plaintiff may demonstrate that his case is
“obvious under existing general principles.” Waid, 87 F.4th at 388.
Contrary to DeFrancesco’s assertions, this is not one of those occasions.
DEFRANCESCO V. ROBBINS 13
generality.” Evans, 997 F.3d at 1067 (quoting al-Kidd, 563
U.S. at 742).
At the same time, qualified immunity “does not require
a case directly on point” regarding the issue at hand. White
v. Pauly, 580 U.S. 73, 79 (2017) (alterations omitted)
(quoting Mullenix v. Luna, 577 U.S. 7, 12 (2015)). Courts
may apply clearly established legal standards to new fact
patterns and, in appropriate circumstances, “rely on the
intersection of multiple cases” to conclude that the
unlawfulness of government officials’ conduct should have
been apparent to them. Polanco v. Diaz, 76 F.4th 918, 930
& n.8 (9th Cir. 2023). Still, the “contours” of the right must
be “sufficiently definite that any reasonable official in the
defendant’s shoes would have understood that he was
violating it.” Kisela v. Hughes, 584 U.S. 100, 105 (2018)
(quoting Plumhoff v. Rickard, 572 U.S. 765, 779 (2014)). Put
another way, “existing precedent must have placed the
statutory or constitutional question beyond debate.” Id. at
104 (quoting White, 580 U.S. at 79).
With this standard in mind, we assess the landscape of
on-point case law that existed at the time Dake and Robbins
allegedly retaliated against DeFrancesco, using the date of
DeFrancesco’s termination—June 30, 2019—as the relevant
temporal threshold.
1. There are a few decisions of the Supreme Court and
the Ninth Circuit that are relevant to this case, but they do
not clearly establish the unlawfulness of Dake and Robbins’s
conduct.
In Thompson v. North American Stainless, LP, the
Supreme Court considered whether a company violated Title
VII’s antiretaliation provision when it fired plaintiff Eric
Thompson because his fiancée, also an employee of the
14 DEFRANCESCO V. ROBBINS
company, had filed a sex discrimination charge with the
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. 562 U.S. 170,
173 (2011). The Court “ha[d] little difficulty concluding”
that firing a non-speaking employee for his fiancée’s legally-
protected speech ran afoul of Title VII’s antiretaliation
provision. Id. Thompson, however, concerned a distinct
statutory right, based on an antiretaliation provision that was
“worded broadly.” Id. at 175. Its statutory holding is not
enough, on its own, to have clearly established
DeFrancesco’s constitutional protection.
Heffernan v. City of Paterson, 578 U.S. 266 (2016), is
also not entirely on point. Heffernan considered whether a
city could constitutionally demote a police officer based on
the mistaken perception of the officer’s “overt involvement”
in a particular mayoral candidate’s campaign. Id. at 269. In
truth, Heffernan was picking up a yard sign for his bedridden
mother. Heffernan held that the demotion violated the
officer’s First Amendment right, as it was the government’s
retaliatory motive—not the employee’s actual activity—that
mattered in assessing the retaliation claim. Id. at 272-73. But
unlike Heffernan, DeFrancesco does not allege or argue that
Dake retaliated against him based on DeFrancesco’s
perceived speech. So Heffernan’s holding is not sufficiently
apropos for qualified immunity purposes.
The most factually relevant Ninth Circuit precedent is
Biggs v. Best, Best & Krieger, 189 F.3d 989 (9th Cir. 1999).
In Biggs, an attorney and her family members alleged that
their First Amendment protection against retaliation had
been violated. Id. at 992-93. The attorney was fired from her
position with a private law firm that served as city attorney
after her family (and she herself) engaged in political
activity. Id. at 992. Our court dismissed the case because
Biggs qualified for the policymaker exception to First
DEFRANCESCO V. ROBBINS 15
Amendment protection for public employee speech, relying
on Fazio v. City of San Francisco, 125 F.3d 1328, 1331-34
(9th Cir. 1997). We never opined on whether Biggs would
otherwise have been “able to assert a First Amendment
section 1983 claim” premised in part on retaliation for her
family’s First Amendment activities. Biggs, 189 F.3d at 994-
95.
DeFrancesco cites several Supreme Court and
precedential Ninth Circuit decisions for the proposition that
the First Amendment prohibits government officials from
retaliating against their employees for speaking out. See
Appellant’s Opening Br. at 29-30 (citing, inter alia,
Hartman v. Moore, 547 U.S. 250, 256 (2006); Nieves v.
Bartlett, 587 U.S. 391 (2019)); see also id. at 36-38;
Appellant’s Reply Br. at 9-11 (citing Sampson, 974 F.3d at
1020-21). But those cases cannot figure into our “clearly-
established” analysis. Although the law is “settled that as a
general matter,” public employees enjoy protection from
retaliation based on their own protected speech, Hartman,
547 U.S. at 256, applying this First Amendment principle to
retaliation for speech by a family member does not represent
the “mere application of settled law to a new factual
permutation.” Dodge v. Evergreen Sch. Dist. #114, 56 F.4th
767, 784 (9th Cir. 2022) (quoting Eng v. Cooley, 552 F.3d
1062, 1076 (9th Cir. 2009)). First Amendment retaliation
cases in which the plaintiff, a protected speaker, was injured
by the employer’s actions do not clearly establish that a
speaker’s family member may not be retaliated against.
Rather, speech-based retaliation against a non-speaking
third-party implicates a different species of constitutional
protection, the contours of which must be independently
delineated.
16 DEFRANCESCO V. ROBBINS
2. Because binding precedents do not clearly establish
DeFrancesco’s First Amendment antiretaliation protection,
we turn next to an array of relevant out-of-circuit and district
court cases to evaluate whether there was, by June 2019, a
“robust consensus of persuasive authority” establishing his
constitutional protection. We conclude that there was not.
To begin, we note that some circuits have recognized that
the First Amendment prohibits retaliation against a public
employee for a family member’s conduct or speech. See
Adler v. Pataki, 185 F.3d 35, 44 (2d Cir. 1999) (deriving the
familial antiretaliation protection from the First Amendment
right of intimate association); Adkins v. Bd. of Educ., 982
F.2d 952, 955-56 (6th Cir. 1993) (same); see also Nailon v.
Univ. of Cincinnati, 715 F. App’x 509, 516-17 (6th Cir.
2017) (deriving the familial antiretaliation right from the
First Amendment’s free speech guarantee); Skalsky v. Indep.
Sch. Dist. No. 743, 772 F.3d 1126, 1129-31 (8th Cir. 2014)
(assuming, without expressly addressing the issue, that
retaliation against a public employee for his wife’s speech is
actionable under the First Amendment). And several district
courts, including some in our circuit, have acknowledged
that the First Amendment’s antiretaliation protection for
public employees may cover the relatives of those engaged
in First Amendment-protected activity.5
5
See, e.g., Freeman v. County of Riverside, No. 18-2171, 2019 WL
7905733, at *5 n.2 (C.D. Cal. Apr. 5, 2019) (“[R]etaliation based on
speech of a close family member is a right protected by the First
Amendment in the Ninth Circuit.”); Isakhanova v. Muniz, No. 15-cv-
03759, 2016 WL 1640649, at *4-5 (N.D. Cal. Apr. 26, 2016)
(acknowledging a “line of cases recognizing a cause of action where an
individual has suffered retaliation for his or her perceived association
with the speech of a close family member” and concluding that plaintiff
DEFRANCESCO V. ROBBINS 17
We turn next to the decisions that Dake and Robbins
contend cast doubt on the doctrinal firmness of the variety of
First Amendment protection here at issue. In one, Gaines v.
Wardynski, 871 F.3d 1203 (11th Cir. 2017), a public school
teacher alleged that her First Amendment free speech and
intimate association rights were violated when she was
denied a promotion after her father published an article in
the local newspaper that criticized the school board and its
superintendent. Id. at 1207-08. The Eleventh Circuit held
that the government was entitled to qualified immunity
because it was not clearly established at the time of the
had made out a viable retaliation claim based on her son’s First
Amendment activity); Quesnoy v. Oregon, No. 10-cv-1538, 2011 WL
5439103, at *11 (D. Or. Nov. 4, 2011) (“A retaliatory act taken against a
person because of the spouse’s conduct violates the First Amendment
right of intimate association.”) (citing Adler, 185 F.3d at 44); Roberts v.
Ferry County, No. CV-07-149, 2008 WL 5121606, at *5, *7 (E.D. Wash.
Dec. 5, 2008) (finding Adler persuasive and denying summary judgment
on plaintiff’s First Amendment intimate association claim that defendant
retaliated against her based on her husband’s conduct); Gray v. Bruneau-
Grand View Sch. Dist. 365, No. CV-06-069, 2007 WL 1381785, at *1
(D. Idaho Mar. 27, 2007) (agreeing with Adler that plaintiff’s claim of
retaliation on the basis of her spouse’s objection to school district policy
should be analyzed as a violation of the First Amendment right of
intimate association); see also Lewis v. Eufaula City Bd. of Educ., 922 F.
Supp. 2d 1291, 1302-04 (M.D. Ala. 2012) (holding that a daughter
“raised a viable question of fact as to whether she was not rehired
because of her association with her father and his speech,” in violation
of the First Amendment); Everitt v. DeMarco, 704 F. Supp. 2d 122, 134-
35 (D. Conn. 2010) (denying summary judgment on couple’s First
Amendment intimate association claim because plaintiffs marshaled
enough evidence that public employee was disciplined for his wife’s
speech); Fannon v. Patterson, No. 13-cv-14, 2014 WL 4273337, at *4
(S.D. Ohio Aug. 29, 2014) (recognizing that plaintiff asserted a
potentially viable First Amendment retaliation claim on the basis of his
perceived association with his parents’ speech).
18 DEFRANCESCO V. ROBBINS
alleged misconduct that the First Amendment prohibited
adverse action against a public employee because of her
father’s protected speech or based on her familial
relationship with her father. Id. at 1212-14.
Gaines is of mixed relevance here. It supports the notion
that U.S. Supreme Court precedent had not clearly
established the constitutional right at issue (at least as of
2013, when the relevant events in Gaines took place). And it
specifically emphasizes that Thompson, which “is not a First
Amendment case,” did not “‘clearly establish’ that what [the
government] did ran afoul of the constitution.” Id. at 1211.
On the other hand, Gaines acknowledges that the First
Amendment generally protects a public employee’s right to
intimate association from government reprisal, although the
Eleventh Circuit did not pass on the underlying
constitutional merits of the specific claims before it and
rested its decision on the “more narrow” clearly established
prong of the qualified immunity analysis. Id. at 1213. Also,
to the extent the Eleventh Circuit applies a more restrictive
standard than we do in determining whether a constitutional
right has been clearly established,6 its qualified immunity
analysis is not entirely applicable in this circuit.
Smith v. Frye, a Fourth Circuit case Dake and Robbins
cite as undermining doctrinal support for DeFrancesco’s
antiretaliation protection, is inapposite. 488 F.3d 263 (4th
6
The Eleventh Circuit requires that a plaintiff point to case law from the
“Supreme Court of the United States, the Eleventh Circuit, or the highest
court in the relevant state” to show that a constitutional right was clearly
established, Gaines, 871 F.3d at 1209 (quoting Jones v. Fransen, 857
F.3d 843, 851-52 (11th Cir. 2017)), whereas the Ninth Circuit recognizes
that a constitutional right may be clearly established by a “robust
consensus” of non-binding authority, Tuuamalemalo, 946 F.3d at 477.
DEFRANCESCO V. ROBBINS 19
Cir. 2007). Smith held that a public employee’s First
Amendment right to political association was not violated
where her boss terminated her because of her son’s political
activity. Id. at 267-71. The court in Smith was not persuaded
that there had been a constitutional violation, primarily
because the employee’s boss was “detach[ed] from the
political process at play.” Id. at 271. In the Smith court’s
view, the facts did not give rise to a reasonable inference that
Smith was terminated as punishment for anyone’s
expressive conduct or political affiliation.
Still, there was enough uncertainty among appellate and
district courts by June 2019 that the First Amendment
protection from retaliation for a family member’s speech
was not “beyond debate.” al-Kidd, 563 U.S. at 741. The
Seventh Circuit had by then “reserve[d]” the question of
whether “a public employer’s refusal to hire a person
because of animosity toward that person’s spouse can []ever
be actionable as a Constitutional claim.” Norman-Nunnery
v. Madison Area Tech. Coll., 625 F.3d 422, 434 (7th Cir.
2010). Other circuits had not considered this issue head-on,
or their unpublished or tangential precedents cast doubt on
the position that the circuit would take with respect to the
kind of First Amendment claim at issue here.7 And some
7
See, e.g., Burge v. Pearl River County, 103 F. App’x 823, 826-27 (5th
Cir. 2004) (“[T]he district court cited no decisional authority, and we are
aware of none, to suggest that a right to raise a First Amendment claim
based on a third party’s ‘public concern’ speech was ‘clearly established’
for qualified-immunity purposes.” (emphasis added)); Rosaura Bldg.
Corp. v. Municipality of Mayaguez, 778 F.3d 55, 67-68 (1st Cir. 2015)
(holding that a company that was denied a government contract “failed
to establish a colorable claim for First Amendment retaliation” where,
among other things, there was a “particularly attenuated relationship
20 DEFRANCESCO V. ROBBINS
district court decisions had held that appellate cases like
Adler, which expressly recognizes a public employee’s First
Amendment protection from retaliation for the protected
activity of his spouse, had not definitively settled the
existence of familial antiretaliation protection under the First
Amendment.8
Furthermore, to the degree DeFrancesco’s antiretaliation
protection is predicated on a First Amendment right to
familial association, see, e.g., Roberts v. U.S. Jaycees, 468
U.S. 609, 617-18 (1984); Keates v. Koile, 883 F.3d 1228,
1236 (9th Cir. 2018), courts have identified ambiguity
between” the company and “the parties exercising First Amendment
rights”—namely, the company’s shareholder’s relatives—and there was
“no allegation that the denial of the [government] contract to [the
company] was designed to or would have any material effect on the
exercise of First Amendment rights by the relatives of shareholders”).
8
See, e.g., Vigil v. Tweed, No. 18-829, 2019 WL 2411740, at *12 (D.N.M.
June 7, 2019) (“Adler is not sufficient to clearly establish a general right
under the First Amendment to be free of retaliation based upon the
conduct of a family member.”); Robbins v. Merrell, No. 15-cv-00156,
2017 WL 1628879, at *5 (D. Utah May 1, 2017) (“Adler sets forth no
clearly-established right applicable here because it does not set forth the
Tenth Circuit, Supreme Court, or majority view.”); Corkern v. Hammond
City, No. 11-1828, 2013 WL 4434417, at *4 (E.D. La. Aug. 14, 2013)
(Adler “hardly constitutes ‘a consensus of cases of persuasive
authority’”); Ballas v. City of Reading, No. 00-CV-2943, 2001 WL
856627, at *4 (E.D. Pa. July 24, 2001) (“[T]he Adler court . . .
acknowledged that the nature and extent of the right to be free of
retaliation based on familial association is ‘hardly clear,’ and that courts
have applied varying standards to determine the scope of such a right,”
and “[f]urthermore, the existence of a single case a different circuit . . .
based upon a new and somewhat amorphous legal theory is insufficient
to clearly establish that right.”).
DEFRANCESCO V. ROBBINS 21
around the constitutional source of that right9 and disagree
about what it would take to establish its violation.10 To be
sure, some ambiguity about the “appropriate ‘home’” for a
constitutional right does not necessarily end the qualified
immunity analysis if the right is otherwise clearly
established in law; “[t]hat there is possible uncertainty as to
the appropriate test does not immunize [a defendant] from
liability.” P.B. v. Koch, 96 F.3d 1298, 1303 n.4 (9th Cir.
1996). But here, the First Amendment protection against
retaliation for a relative’s speech was not otherwise so firmly
delineated by the time of the alleged misconduct that we can
overlook the doctrinal confusion about its source and
content.
In sum, there was no binding precedent that clearly
established DeFrancesco’s constitutional protection from
retaliation by June 2019, when he was ultimately terminated.
And although there was authority favoring the recognition of
the protection DeFrancesco claims here, at the time of his
firing, it was not “settled law” that retaliation against a
9
See, e.g., Matsusick v. Erie Cnty. Water Auth., 757 F.3d 31, 61 (2d Cir.
2014) (describing the “ambiguity of the right to intimate association”);
Adler, 185 F.3d at 42 (explaining that the “nature and extent” of the First
Amendment right of intimate association is “hardly clear”).
10
Compare Muir v. Decatur County, 917 F.3d 1050, 1054 (8th Cir. 2019)
(explaining that the “key question” in a First Amendment right of
intimate association case is “whether the government ‘directly and
substantially interfere[d] with the . . . right to enter and maintain [a]
marital relationship,’” so state action having only a “collateral effect” on
marriage will not amount to a constitutional violation (citation omitted)),
with Gaspers v. Ohio Dep’t of Youth Servs., 648 F.3d 400, 413 (6th Cir.
2011) (noting that in “cases challenging purported acts of retaliation that
affect the right of marriage . . . the loss of a job because of a protected
marital relationship ‘constitutes undue intrusion by the state in that
relationship’” (citations omitted)).
22 DEFRANCESCO V. ROBBINS
public employee for his relative’s speech runs afoul of the
First Amendment. Wesby, 583 U.S. at 63 (quoting Hunter v.
Bryant, 502 U.S. 224, 228 (1991)). As the contours of this
protection were not sufficiently defined in June 2019, the
district court correctly held that Dake and Robbins were
entitled to qualified immunity.
CONCLUSION
We hold today that, whether or not the First Amendment
protects public employees from retaliation for a family
member’s speech, this principle was not clearly established
at the time of DeFrancesco’s termination. We therefore
AFFIRM the district court’s dismissal of DeFrancesco’s
Section 1983 claim.
BERZON, J., concurring:
In August 1953, Air Force reserve officer Milo
Radulovich was at home with his wife and children when
two uniformed men appeared at his doorstep. They were
high-ranking Air Force officials who had come to tell
Radulovich that, after ten years of service, he was being
discharged from the military—but not because of his own
conduct. Radulovich’s commission was instead revoked
because of his “close and continuing association” with his
father, who was accused of subscribing to a pro-Communist
newspaper, and his sister, who had participated in some
political pickets and protests.1 Radulovich fought back,
launching a legal challenge to his termination that resulted
in his reinstatement. He also became a “searing symbol” of
1
Michael Ranville, To Strike at a King: The Turning Point in the
McCarthy Witch-Hunt 3–6 (1997).
DEFRANCESCO V. ROBBINS 23
the “excesses of anti-Communism in the 1950s” when his
story was featured on Edward R. Murrow’s television
program See It Now; the broadcast, some say, marked “the
beginning of the end for the McCarthy era.”2
This case is not nearly as dramatic as Radulovich’s. But
a case’s subject need not be renowned, nor its facts
extraordinary, to take on constitutional significance. At its
core, DeFrancesco’s termination raises the same question as
Radulovich’s: May the government discharge or otherwise
disadvantage a public employee in retaliation for his
relative’s speech?
The First Amendment provides an answer. The “threat
of dismissal from public employment is,” and long has been,
a “potent means of inhibiting speech.” Pickering v. Bd. of
Educ., 391 U.S. 563, 574 (1968). Individuals are likely to
refrain from speaking where the threat is against close
relatives as well as where it is against themselves. The First
Amendment thus, in appropriate circumstances, prohibits
reprisal against a government employee based on his close
relative’s protected speech.
I write separately to explain why that is so. Even though
the familial antiretaliation protection under the First
Amendment was not clearly established at the time of
DeFrancesco’s termination, as our per curiam opinion
concludes, I would reach the first prong of the qualified
immunity analysis and hold that protection is well-grounded
in Supreme Court and Ninth Circuit precedent. I also would
conclude, taking the facts alleged in DeFrancesco’s
2
Douglas Martin, Milo Radulovich, 81, Dies; Symbol of ‘50s Red Scare,
N.Y. Times (Nov. 21, 2007), https://www.nytimes.com/2007/
11/21/us/21radulovich.html; see also Good Night, and Good Luck!
(Warner Independent Pictures 2005).
24 DEFRANCESCO V. ROBBINS
complaint as true and drawing all reasonable inferences in
his favor, that Dake and Robbins violated DeFrancesco’s
constitutional protection against retaliation for his husband’s
speech.
I
I begin by explaining why we should have addressed the
constitutional merits in this case. Courts have “discretion to
decide whether [the full two-step qualified immunity
analysis] is worthwhile in particular cases.” Pearson v.
Callahan, 555 U.S. 223, 242 (2009). But that discretion is
not without bounds. Like any other discretionary judicial
authority, it may not be exercised whimsically. Cf. U.S. v.
Hinkson, 585 F.3d 1247, 1259–61 (9th Cir. 2009). Rather,
the Supreme Court and our court have developed principles
that guide this court in determining whether engaging in the
first-prong analysis is “worthwhile.”
We consider, for instance, whether the court’s guidance
in a particular constitutional area is especially “needed.”
Horton by Horton v. City of Santa Maria, 915 F.3d 592, 602
(9th Cir. 2019) (quoting Mattos v. Agarano, 661 F.3d 433,
440 (9th Cir. 2011) (en banc)). Relatedly, it makes sense to
address the first prong where a decision could “[l]ay down a
marker for future” litigation, Olson v. County of Grant, 127
F.4th 1193, 1203 (9th Cir. 2025), as opposed to where the
“constitutional question is so factbound that the decision
provides little guidance for future cases,” Pearson, 555 U.S.
at 237. The development of constitutional precedent is
“especially valuable with respect to questions that do not
frequently arise in cases in which a qualified immunity
defense is unavailable.” Id. at 236. And there are other, more
pragmatic factors to consider, such as whether the
constitutional questions at issue have been adequately
DEFRANCESCO V. ROBBINS 25
briefed or the “precise factual basis for the plaintiff’s claim”
is hard to identify. Id. at 238–39.
These principles militate decisively in favor of
conducting the first-prong, merits qualified immunity
analysis in this case.
First, setting a constitutional precedent here would be
clarifying for lower courts and “lay down” an important
constitutional “marker” for future cases. Unlike several other
circuit courts, see Per Curiam Opinion at 16; infra at 32–33,
the Ninth Circuit has never squarely addressed whether the
First Amendment protects a public employee from
retaliation for a close relative’s speech. But several district
courts in our circuit have wrestled with this question from
different angles, almost uniformly recognizing some basic
First Amendment protection from retaliation under such
circumstances. See, e.g., Vargas v. City of Tracy, No. 2:22-
cv-01454, 2025 WL 578475 (E.D. Cal. Feb. 21, 2025);
Freeman v. County of Riverside, No. ED CV 18-2171, 2019
WL 7905733 (C.D. Cal. Apr. 5, 2019); Isakhanova v. Muniz,
No. 15-cv-03759, 2016 WL 1640649 (N.D. Cal. Apr. 26,
2016); Quesnoy v. Oregon, No. 10-cv-1538, 2011 WL
5439103 (D. Or. Nov. 4, 2011); Roberts v. Ferry County,
No. CV-07-149, 2008 WL 5121606 (E.D. Wash. Dec. 5,
2008); Gray v. Bruneau-Grand View Sch. Dist., No. CV-06-
069, 2007 WL 1381785 (D. Idaho Mar. 27, 2007).
The fact that district courts regularly grapple with the
constitutional issue presented here suggests that guidance
from our court is needed. We have the opportunity to provide
a benchmark for future cases in this circuit. Also, by trying—
as I attempt later—to provide a careful analysis of the
various strands of pertinent authority, we would help
develop consistent law across circuits. What’s more, the
26 DEFRANCESCO V. ROBBINS
core question raised by this case—whether a public
employee can in some circumstances be protected, under the
First Amendment, from government retaliation for his
relative’s protected speech—is a generic constitutional
issue, not an intensely “factbound” one.
Second, this case presents a question which does not
“frequently arise in cases in which a qualified immunity
defense is unavailable.” Pearson, 555 U.S. at 236. The
question of a public employee’s First Amendment protection
against retaliation for a family member’s speech almost
always arises in the context of a qualified immunity defense.
Although a public employee in DeFrancesco’s situation
could in theory sue for injunctive or declaratory relief, cf.
Evans v. Skolnik, 997 F.3d 1060, 1071 (9th Cir. 2021), in this
kind of retaliation case, plaintiffs overwhelmingly seek
monetary damages after having been disciplined, demoted,
or fired.
Finally, this case presents an acceptable vehicle for us to
provide some initial guidance to lower courts. The
constitutional issues were adequately briefed by the parties,
and the precise factual basis for DeFrancesco’s claim is
developed enough to allow us to set forth a preliminary
framework for First Amendment familial antiretaliation
claims, a framework on which future courts may elaborate.
In short, this case provides an appropriate and important
opportunity for developing Ninth Circuit constitutional
precedent on a recurring, generic legal issue. There will
never be clearly established law on the pivotal and discrete
question before us unless it is addressed in a case—such as
this one—in which it is distinctly and adequately raised. The
result of this vacuum will be that government bodies can
continue to violate the First Amendment when similar
DEFRANCESCO V. ROBBINS 27
circumstances arise, as they will face no adverse
consequences if they do so. It is therefore “worthwhile” to
reach the first prong of the qualified immunity analysis.
In sum, rather than skirting the merits issue, the panel
ought to have considered the contours of the constitutional
protection DeFrancesco invoked and decided whether he
plausibly alleged a violation of that protection. Cf. Sampson
v. Cty. of L.A. ex rel. L.A. Cty. Dep’t of Child. and Fam.
Servs., 974 F.3d 1012, 1023 (9th Cir. 2020). I do so now.
II
DeFrancesco alleges that Robbins and Dake violated the
First Amendment by retaliating against him for his
husband’s whistleblowing speech. The parties disagree
about whether the First Amendment protects spouses or
other close relatives under such circumstances. If it does, the
parties contest whether DeFrancesco’s complaint adequately
alleged that Dake and Robbins violated this constitutional
protection. I address each issue in turn.
A
Under Pickering and its progeny, a public employee’s
prima facie First Amendment retaliation claim has three
elements: (1) constitutionally-protected speech; (2) adverse
employment action; and (3) a showing that the protected
speech was a substantial or motivating factor for the adverse
employment action. Dodge v. Evergreen School Dist. 114,
56 F.4th 767, 776 (9th Cir. 2022). At issue here is whether a
plaintiff who has not himself engaged in First Amendment-
protected speech can invoke First Amendment
antiretaliation protection based on the speech of a close
relative—in this instance, his husband, another public
employee who had worked for the same institution. In my
28 DEFRANCESCO V. ROBBINS
view, such a plaintiff has a “hybrid” First Amendment
retaliation protection “involv[ing] both speech and
associational” elements. See Hudson v. Craven, 403 F.3d
691, 693 (9th Cir. 2005).
The first component of this hybrid First Amendment
right is protected speech. The question at hand is whether the
speech can be that of a close relative of the individual
retaliated against.
“The First Amendment reflects ‘a profound national
commitment to the principle that debate on public issues
should be uninhibited, robust, and wide-open.’” Snyder v.
Phelps, 562 U.S. 443, 452 (2011) (quoting New York Times
Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254, 270 (1964)). As a general
matter, the First Amendment shields not only those who
actually engage in protected activity but also those whose
protected activity might be chilled due to an unconstitutional
constraint. For example, “[f]acial challenges to overly broad
statutes are allowed not primarily for the benefit of the
litigant, but for the benefit of society—to prevent the statute
from chilling the First Amendment rights of other parties not
before the court.” Sec’y of State v. Joseph H. Munson Co.,
467 U.S. 947, 958 (1984). And, although “[p]arties
ordinarily are not permitted to assert constitutional rights
other than their own” absent a showing of third party
standing, Wasson v. Sonoma Cnty. Junior Coll., 203 F.3d
659, 663 (9th Cir. 2000) (citing NAACP v. Alabama, 357
U.S. 449, 459 (1958)), courts assessing First Amendment
claims often look beyond the directly affected individual and
consider how restrictive government action might
undermine the constitutional interests of other persons—for
instance, listeners, see, e.g., Thunder Studios, Inc. v. Kazal,
13 F.4th 736, 743–44 (9th Cir. 2021) (citing, inter alia, Va.
State Bd. of Pharmacy v. Va. Citizens Consumer Council,
DEFRANCESCO V. ROBBINS 29
Inc., 425 U.S. 748, 756 (1976); Kleindienst v. Mandel, 408
U.S. 753 (1972)), or persons who will be similarly situated
to the plaintiff in the future, see, e.g., Ariz. Students’ Ass’n
v. Ariz. Bd. of Regents, 824 F.3d 858, 868–69 (9th Cir.
2016).
Of particular pertinence here, the Supreme Court has
already widened the First Amendment’s aperture to include
protection for some public employees who have not
themselves engaged in First Amendment-protected speech.
Heffernan v. City of Paterson considered whether a city
could constitutionally demote a police officer based on the
mistaken perception that he had become “overt[ly]
involv[ed]” in a particular mayoral candidate’s campaign
when, in truth, Heffernan was picking up a yard sign for his
bedridden mother. 578 U.S. 266, 269 (2016). Heffernan held
that the demotion violated the First Amendment, as it was
the government’s retaliatory motive—not the employee’s
actual activity—that mattered in assessing the retaliation
claim. Id. at 272–73. “The constitutional harm at issue in the
ordinary [First Amendment retaliation] case consists in large
part of discouraging employees—both the employee
discharged (or demoted) and his or her colleagues—from
engaging in protected activities,” the Court reasoned. Id. at
273. “The discharge of one tells the others that they engage
in protected activity at their peril.” Id.
Here, DeFrancesco did not engage in First Amendment-
protected speech, nor does the complaint allege that Robbins
or Dake believed that he did. But he was allegedly harassed
and fired because of his husband’s protected speech. Such
retaliation undoubtedly would signal to other employees, as
in Heffernan, that “they engage in protected activity at their
peril,” although the direct peril in this instance is harm to
relatives rather than to themselves. Id. And as one district
30 DEFRANCESCO V. ROBBINS
court persuasively put the matter, the constitutional
commitment to open debate “would be severely frustrated if
the First Amendment did not include within its protective
ambit an employee who bears . . . a close relationship with a
person who engages in protected speech” because “[i]f the
government could freely retaliate against such employees,
there would be an ‘obvious chilling effect on free speech.’”
Lewis v. Eufaula City Bd. of Educ., 922 F. Supp. 2d 1291,
1303 (M.D. Ala. 2012) (quoting Reno v. ACLU, 521 U.S.
844, 845 (1997)).
The Supreme Court has recognized a similar danger in
the context of a retaliation suit under Title VII of the Civil
Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq. In Thompson
v. North American Stainless, LP, the Court considered
whether a company violated Title VII’s antiretaliation
provision when it fired plaintiff Eric Thompson because his
fiancée, also an employee of the company, had filed a sex
discrimination charge with the Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”). 562 U.S. 170, 173
(2011). Like the First Amendment, Title VII protects certain
kinds of employee expression, cf. Coszalter v. City of Salem,
320 F.3d 968, 976 (9th Cir. 2003): An employer may not
discriminate against an employee who “oppose[s] any
practice made an unlawful employment practice” under the
statute, who files a charge with the EEOC, or who
participates in an EEOC proceeding, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-
3(a). The Thompson Court “ha[d] little difficulty
concluding” that firing a non-speaking employee for his
fiancée’s legally-protected speech ran afoul of Title VII’s
antiretaliation provision. 562 U.S. at 173. “We think it
obvious,” the decision explained, “that a reasonable worker
might be dissuaded from engaging in protected activity if she
DEFRANCESCO V. ROBBINS 31
knew that” a “close family member,” such as a fiancé, would
be fired. Id. at 174, 175.
At the same time, Thompson cautioned that Title VII’s
protection against retaliation is not boundless; otherwise,
“inflicting a mild[] reprisal on a mere acquaintance” of a
protected speaker might trigger liability. Id. at 175. In the
First Amendment context, a similar limitation flows from
another facet of the First Amendment—the freedom of
association—which helps place an outer boundary on the
scope of the constitutional guard against retaliation for
protected speech.
The Supreme Court has referred to the constitutional
freedom of association in “two distinct senses”: (1) as a right
to intimate association, reflecting the freedom to “enter into
and maintain certain intimate human relationships” without
“undue intrusion by the State”; and (2) as a right to
expressive association, reflecting the freedom to “associate
for the purpose of engaging in those activities protected by
the First Amendment—speech, assembly, petition . . . , and
the exercise of religion.” Roberts v. U.S. Jaycees, 468 U.S.
609, 617–18 (1984).
The Fourteenth Amendment is “most often identified” as
the “source” of the right to intimate association. IDK, Inc. v.
Clark County, 836 F.2d 1185, 1192 (9th Cir. 1988); see also
Erotic Serv. Provider Legal Educ. & Rsch. Project v.
Gascon, 880 F.3d 450, 458 (9th Cir. 2018). But the Supreme
Court has made clear that the First Amendment-based right
of association extends to family relationships,
“emphasiz[ing] that the First Amendment protects those
relationships, including family relationships, that
presuppose ‘deep attachments and commitments to the
necessarily few other individuals with whom one shares not
32 DEFRANCESCO V. ROBBINS
only a special community of thoughts, experiences, and
beliefs but also distinctively personal aspects of one’s life.’”
Bd. of Dirs. of Rotary Int’l v. Rotary Club of Duarte, 481
U.S. 537, 545 (1987) (quoting Roberts, 468 U.S. at 619–20).
We have echoed Roberts’s observation that “a single
association may have intimate and expressive features and
therefore be entitled to claim the protection of both the first
and fourteenth amendments.” IDK, Inc., 836 F.2d at 1192;
see also Dible v. City of Chandler, 515 F.3d 918, 929 (9th
Cir. 2008). As the First Amendment protects “family
relationships,” we have “held that claims under both the First
and Fourteenth Amendment for unwarranted interference
with the right to familial association could survive a motion
to dismiss.” Keates v. Koile, 883 F.3d 1228, 1236 (9th Cir.
2018).
Other circuits have also acknowledged that retaliating
against a public employee based on the conduct of his family
member may infringe on the employee’s First Amendment
right to associate with family members. The Second Circuit,
for example, has held that the First Amendment right of
association prevents the state from discharging an employee
“for something as insubstantial as a public employer’s
discomfort about a discrimination lawsuit brought by [that]
employee’s spouse.” Adler v. Pataki, 185 F.3d 35, 44 (2d Cir.
1999). The Sixth Circuit has likewise recognized that firing
a public employee based on her familial relationship may
infringe on the employee’s First Amendment associational
right. See Adkins v. Bd. of Educ., 982 F.2d 952, 953–54 (6th
Cir. 1993); see also Gaspers v. Ohio Dep’t of Youth Servs.,
648 F.3d 400 (6th Cir. 2011); Sowards v. Loudon County, 203
F.3d 426 (6th Cir. 2000). The Eighth Circuit has entertained
a public employee’s claim that a school district violated his
“First Amendment right to associate freely with his wife
DEFRANCESCO V. ROBBINS 33
when [it] changed his schedule in retaliation for her speaking
at [a school] board meeting,” although the court ultimately
concluded that there wasn’t a sufficient causal connection
between his wife’s expression and the adverse employment
action to sustain the claim. Skalsky v. Indep. Sch. Dist. No.
743, 772 F.3d 1126, 1129–31 (8th Cir. 2014). And the
Eleventh Circuit has noted that “a public employee can[not]
be subjected to an adverse employment action for exercising
[her First Amendment] right [to freedom of association].”
Gaines v. Wardynski, 871 F.3d 1203, 1213 (11th Cir. 2017).3
Although federal appellate courts have applied different
standards to First Amendment familial association claims,
see Per Curiam Opinion at 21 n.10, case law supports the
principle that punishing a public employee based on
displeasure with the protected conduct or speech of their
family member is constitutionally problematic.
Weaving together the free speech and freedom of
association strands of the First Amendment would allow this
court to impose a reasonable outer limit on the scope of the
constitutional protection against retaliation for the speech of
a close relative. I would hold, in this case, that a public
employee has a hybrid speech-associational protection
against retaliation for a third party’s First Amendment-
protected speech. Without this rule, a government employer
could exact retribution for protected speech in a way that
impermissibly chills employees’ exercise of their First
Amendment rights. But to rely on this protection, the
3
The Tenth Circuit has also observed, as a general matter, that “[a]ctions
taken by a public official against a public employee because of animosity
for the employee’s spouse can in certain circumstances . . .
unconstitutionally burden the marriage relationship” under the First
Amendment. Morfin v. Albuquerque Pub. Sch., 906 F.2d 1434, 1440
(10th Cir. 1990).
34 DEFRANCESCO V. ROBBINS
employee-plaintiff should have a close familial association
with the protected speaker. Without this limitation,
“prohibiting reprisals against third parties” may “lead to
difficult line-drawing problems concerning the types of
relationships entitled to protection.” Thompson, 562 U.S. at
174.
DeFrancesco is a former public employee who alleges he
was harassed and fired for his husband’s First Amendment-
protected speech; marriage is, of course, “the most intimate
of relationships.” Adler, 185 F.3d at 44. I therefore would
have concluded that DeFrancesco enjoyed some
constitutional protection against workplace retaliation for
his husband’s speech.
B
I next consider whether DeFrancesco’s complaint
plausibly alleged that Robbins and Dake’s actions
transgressed this constitutional protection. As earlier
explained, for a public employee bringing a speech-based
First Amendment retaliation claim under the Pickering
doctrine to state a prima facie case, he must allege:
(1) constitutionally-protected speech; (2) adverse
employment action; and (3) that the protected speech was a
substantial or motivating factor for the adverse employment
action.4 Dodge, 56 F.4th at 776.
4
Ordinarily, for a public employee’s speech to garner First Amendment
protection under Pickering and its progeny, the employee must show,
among other things, that his speech addressed a matter of public concern
and was spoken in his capacity as a private citizen, not as a public
official. See Dodge, 56 F.4th at 777. And once a prima facie showing of
protected speech and retaliation is made, the court engages in balancing
DEFRANCESCO V. ROBBINS 35
As to the first element, the district court concluded that
DeFrancesco’s complaint raised an inference that
Goldman’s alleged whistleblowing speech was
constitutionally protected under the Pickering standard.
Dake and Robbins have expressly declined before this court
to challenge that determination. So I assume its validity for
the purposes of my analysis.
As to the second element, DeFrancesco alleges that he
suffered adverse employment action in the form of a
campaign of harassment and targeting, culminating in
termination. On appeal, Dake and Robbins do not contest
that these activities qualify as adverse employment actions.
to determine whether the government’s legitimate managerial interests
“outweigh[]” the employee’s First Amendment rights. Id. at 781.
Where the state punishes a public employee for his relative’s speech,
it is not clear whether or how each element of the Pickering framework
applies. For example, what if the relative were not himself a public
employee? In that case, I tend to think the public concern test would not
apply (and, of course, the relative’s speech would necessarily be spoken
in his capacity as a private citizen, for he holds no public office). Another
complexity: if the plaintiff makes a prima facie showing of protected
speech and retaliation on that basis, does the subsequent balancing
between the government’s managerial interests and the First Amendment
protection focus on the speaker or the employee retaliated against? I
would think the latter.
Whatever the answers to these questions, I need not, and do not,
resolve these doctrinal intricacies. Goldman and DeFrancesco were
government employees at the same institution, and the parties have
throughout the course of this litigation proceeded on the understanding
that Goldman’s speech must satisfy the full panoply of requirements
under Pickering for DeFrancesco to have a colorable prima facie First
Amendment retaliation claim. I therefore proceed on that understanding
as well.
36 DEFRANCESCO V. ROBBINS
Dake and Robbins do take issue with the third element,
arguing that the complaint does not plausibly allege that
either Dake or Robbins retaliated against DeFrancesco
because of his husband’s protected speech. The “substantial
or motivating factor” element of a First Amendment
retaliation claim “requires the plaintiff to show causation and
the defendant’s intent,” Riley’s Am. Heritage Farms v.
Elsasser, 32 F.4th 707, 721 (9th Cir. 2022), meaning that the
government defendant’s “retaliatory motive” must be a “but-
for” cause of the plaintiff’s injury, Nieves v. Bartlett, 587
U.S. 391, 398–99 (2019). In public employment First
Amendment cases, establishing this causal connection may
be as “straightforward” as evaluating whether “evidence of
the motive and the discharge [i]s sufficient for a
circumstantial demonstration that the one caused the other.”
Id. at 399 (quoting Hartman v. Moore, 547 U.S. 250, 260
(2006)).
DeFrancesco alleges that he had a “stellar employment
record,” “did not receive a single complaint” about his work,
and took on increasing responsibility during his tenure as
Senior Director of Operations at the University of Arizona
Health Sciences (“UAHS”). He also alleges that Dake began
mistreating DeFrancesco soon after starting his new position
as Senior Vice President (“SVP”) at UAHS, which was, in
turn, less than a month after Goldman spoke out about the
irregularities in the hiring process. About a year later, Dake
fired DeFrancesco. The absence of poor performance
reviews, along with the temporal proximity between
Goldman’s protected speech, Dake’s hire, and the targeting
and firing of DeFrancesco, support the inference that Dake
had a vendetta against DeFrancesco based on his husband’s
speech.
DEFRANCESCO V. ROBBINS 37
Further, DeFrancesco alleges that Robbins and Dake had
long been extremely close friends; that Robbins told Dake
that Goldman had been a “vocal and firm advocate against
Dake”; and Robbins also told Dake that Goldman’s husband
“was an executive in UAHS and . . . Dake had the authority
to fire him.” DeFrancesco further alleges a specific instance
when, after refusing to give DeFrancesco the formal title for
the job that he had been effectively performing for more than
two years, Dake told DeFrancesco that he had “‘a decision
to make’ now that [his] husband had left the University.”
DeFrancesco alleged that the “manner, directness and tone
of that statement made it clear to DeFrancesco that Dake
wanted DeFrancesco to leave the University and that
DeFrancesco was not welcome for as long as Dake was the
head of UAHS.” Dake’s comment lends credence to the
inference that Dake was targeting DeFrancesco for reasons
connected to DeFrancesco’s husband’s speech during the
SVP hiring process.
“[P]ut[ting] two and two together,” Keyser v.
Sacramento City Unified Sch. Dist., 265 F.3d 741, 754 (9th
Cir. 2001), these allegations give rise to a reasonable
inference that Dake retaliated against DeFrancesco because
he knew that Goldman had actively advocated against his
candidacy.
Finally, the complaint plausibly alleges that Robbins
participated in the retaliatory campaign against
DeFrancesco. Section 1983 imposes liability both on
persons who deprive a plaintiff of constitutional rights and
on those who “cause[]” the plaintiff “to be subjected” to that
deprivation. Peck v. Montoya, 51 F.4th 877, 888–89 (9th Cir.
2022). A Section 1983 defendant must, of course, be more
than a “mere bystander.” Id. at 889 (citation omitted). Where
an official’s individual actions do not “themselves rise to the
38 DEFRANCESCO V. ROBBINS
level of a constitutional violation,” that official may be held
liable under Section 1983 “only if [he] is an ‘integral
participant’ in the unlawful act.” Id. (citation omitted). There
are at least two scenarios in which an official’s conduct may
render him an “integral participant”: “those in which (1) the
defendant knows about and acquiesces in the
constitutionally defective conduct as part of a common plan
with those whose conduct constitutes the violation or (2) the
defendant ‘set[s] in motion a series of acts by others which
[the defendant] knows or reasonably should know would
cause others to inflict the constitutional injury.’” Id. (quoting
Johnson v. Duffy, 588 F.2d 740, 743–44 (9th Cir. 1978)).
According to the complaint, Robbins was an “integral
participant” in Dake’s retaliation. Robbins told Dake that
Goldman was a vocal and firm advocate against Dake, that
DeFrancesco was a UAHS executive, and that Dake had
authority to fire DeFrancesco. DeFrancesco alleges, on
information and belief, that Robbins relayed this information
with the intent that Dake harass DeFrancesco. The complaint
also avers that Robbins either directly or implicitly
encouraged Dake to retaliate against DeFrancesco, or, at a
minimum, acted with callous disregard as to whether Dake
would do so. Goldman allegedly complained to Robbins on
DeFrancesco’s behalf once Dake’s retaliatory campaign
began, so Robbins was aware of Dake’s targeting of
DeFrancesco. Yet the targeting and harassment did not stop.
Drawing all reasonable inferences in DeFrancesco’s
favor, these allegations plausibly demonstrate that Robbins
knew about and acceded to Dake’s unconstitutional conduct.
Robbins, who had supervisory authority over Dake, was
“made aware of the ongoing violation” of DeFrancesco’s
constitutional rights. Riley’s Am. Heritage Farms, 32 F.4th at
724. He acquiesced in the retaliation by telling Dake about
DEFRANCESCO V. ROBBINS 39
Goldman’s outspokenness, the relationship between
Goldman and DeFrancesco, and Dake’s position of authority
over DeFrancesco. And he “failed to remedy” the situation
by not intervening to end Dake’s retaliatory conduct,
although he knew of the conduct and had the authority to end
it. Id.
As this court acknowledged in OSU Student Alliance v.
Ray, university administrators who are aware of retaliation
and do nothing to stop it can be liable for First Amendment
violations under Section 1983. 699 F.3d 1053, 1075 (9th Cir.
2012). Alternatively, the allegations in the complaint
demonstrate that Robbins “set in motion a series of acts” that
he knew or should have known would cause injury to
DeFrancesco. Peck, 51 F.4th at 891.
In short, DeFrancesco’s complaint adequately alleges a
causal relationship between the Officials’s retaliatory motive
and DeFrancesco’s injury and includes sufficient allegations
to implicate Robbins in the retaliation.
III
In sum, I would have engaged in the first prong of the
qualified immunity analysis, concluding that DeFrancesco
had a First Amendment protection against retaliation for his
husband’s protected speech and that Dake and Robbins
violated that protection. When our court unnecessarily skirts
pressing constitutional questions in qualified immunity
appeals, our jurisprudence becomes stagnant and
unresponsive to litigants’ concerns. In my view, where the
opportunity presents itself to provide much-needed clarity to
the legal community on a general legal question—that is, one
not mired in the facts of a particular dispute—we should
seize the chance to do so, especially when it comes to a
constitutional interest as critical as free speech.
40 DEFRANCESCO V. ROBBINS
The First Amendment “was fashioned to assure
unfettered interchange of ideas for the bringing about of
political and social changes desired by the people.” Lane v.
Franks, 573 U.S. 228, 235–36 (2014) (quoting Roth v. U.S.,
354 U.S. 476, 484 (1957)). “The right to speak freely . . . [is]
one of the chief distinctions that sets us apart from
totalitarian regimes.” Ashton v. Kentucky, 384 U.S. 195, 200
(1966) (quoting Terminiello v. City of Chicago, 337 U.S. 1,
4 (1949)). Although assuredly not absolute, this right is such
a “fundamental principle of the American government” that,
as Justice Brandeis once warned, “order cannot be secured
merely through fear of punishment for its infraction.”
Sullivan, 376 U.S. at 270 (quoting Whitney v. California, 274
U.S. 357, 375–76 (1927) (Brandeis, J., concurring)).
These foundational First Amendment tenets “remain[]
true when speech concerns information related to or learned
through public employment,” and the Supreme Court has
“cautioned time and time again that public employers may
not condition employment on the relinquishment of
constitutional rights.” Lane, 573 U.S. at 236. And these
principles should apply equally when, instead of taking aim
at the protected speaker, the government takes aim at his
family member. As Milo Radulovich’s story shows, modern
history is replete with examples of draconian government
reprisal against kin of suspected dissidents, “subversives,”
or political “enemies.”5 The stakes of this particular case are
5
See, e.g., supra at 1 n.1, 2 n.2; Landon R. Y. Storrs, Red Scare Politics
and the Suppression of Popular Front Feminism: The Loyalty
Investigation of Mary Dublin Keyserling, 90 J. Amer. Hist. 491, 491–92
(2003); see also, e.g., Timothy Snyder, Bloodlands: Europe Between
Hitler and Stalin 72 (2010); Golfo Alexopoulos, Stalin and the Politics
of Kinship: Practices of Collective Punishment, 1920s-1940s, 50 Comp.
DEFRANCESCO V. ROBBINS 41
admittedly not as dire. But if the First Amendment is to be a
bulwark for democracy and against authoritarianism, it must
cast a wide enough net to prevent indirect forms of
retribution that undoubtedly and unjustifiably chill protected
speech.
So: although First Amendment protections for public
employees are subject to well-established constraints, see,
e.g., Garcetti v. Ceballos, 547 U.S. 410 (2006); Connick v.
Myers, 461 U.S. 138 (1983), both logic and law counsel that
a government employer cannot fire or otherwise retaliate
against its employees for no other reason than that it
disapproves of the constitutionally-protected speech of an
employee’s close relative. Should a future opportunity arise
to enshrine this principle in binding Ninth Circuit precedent,
I urge our court to do so.
Stud. in Soc’y & Hist. 91 (2008); Cynthia Hooper, “Terror of Intimacy:
Family Politics in the 1930s Soviet Union,” in Everyday Life in Early
Soviet Russia 65, 70–73 (Christina Kiaer & Eric Naiman, eds., 2005).
Plain English Summary
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT No.
Key Points
01FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT No.
02DAKE, in his individual capacity; UNKNOWN PARTIES, named as and does 1-10 inclusive, Defendants-Appellees.
03Jorgenson, District Judge, Presiding Argued and Submitted August 21, 2024 San Francisco, CA Filed May 7, 2025 Before: Marsha S.
04Per Curiam Opinion; Concurrence by Judge Berzon 2 DEFRANCESCO V.
Frequently Asked Questions
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT No.
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This case was decided on May 7, 2025.
Use the citation No. 10553008 and verify it against the official reporter before filing.