MIKELL, Judge.
Marion Marshall appeals the trial court's grant of summary judgment to police detective Silvia D. Browning in Marshall's suit for malicious prosecution. We find that Browning was entitled to official immunity for her actions in pursuing Marshall's prosecution for three counts of child molestation and one count of sexual battery. Accordingly, we affirm.
So viewed, the evidence shows that in 2005 Marshall was employed as an elementary school teacher. Browning, then a detective with the Roswell Police Department, received a referral from the Fulton County Department of Family and Children Services regarding allegations made by two female students in Marshall's fourth grade class. Browning met with social worker Jennifer Bui, who indicated that two ten-year-old girls, J.M. and L.L., had separately reported that Marshall had asked them if he could touch them, that he had passed notes to the girls asking if he could touch them, that he had touched the girls, and that they felt uncomfortable about it. Bui also told Browning that in 2004 another student, ten-year-old A.S., had claimed that Marshall had conversations with her about trust and had touched her above the knee, but that A.S. had later recanted the allegations. Bui gave Browning a copy of her report, which included Bui's notes, findings, written statements from J.M. and L.L., written statements from the children's mothers, and Marshall's written denials.
Less than a week after Browning met with Bui, separate forensic interviews were conducted with A.S., J.M., and L.L. According to Browning, who witnessed the interviews, A.S. described an incident where Marshall pulled her into a storage closet, lifted her up by the waist to sit her on a chair, and hugged her for a long time. When she started to walk away Marshall touched the child's bottom with an open hand. During recess, Marshall told A.S. that he could lose his job and his family if she told anyone. A.S. went home and told her mother about the incident. A.S. admitted that she later changed her story but maintained that she did so because she was worried about Marshall losing his job and his family.
In her interview, L.L. said that Marshall had touched her on the stomach, but that the touching may have been accidental. She also told the interviewer that Marshall had played with her fingers. L.L. reported that Marshall wrote her a note asking if he could touch her, and she answered "yes." He also wrote her notes asking if she could keep a secret and how he could know he could trust her. After Marshall tapped the child on her chest with a pen, she told Marshall that he could not touch her. When L.L. was taking a test in the back of the class Marshall handed her a note asking her if she was sure that she did not want him to touch her. She wrote back, "yes."
Three days after the children were interviewed Browning met with an assistant district attorney who, after being apprised of the facts, indicated that there was sufficient evidence to go forward with search and arrest warrants. Browning submitted affidavits to the magistrate and obtained search warrants for Marshall's residence and his classroom as well as four arrest warrants charging Marshall with three counts of child molestation and one count of sexual battery.
Browning and other officers executed the search warrant at Marshall's residence. Browning interviewed Marshall, who denied touching any of his students, denied discussing issues of trust or keeping secrets, and indicated that the allegations against him were a plot to get him in trouble. No physical evidence supporting the children's allegations was found in Marshall's home or on his computer. Marshall was arrested, taken to jail, and subsequently appeared before a magistrate judge and in superior court.
During the summer and fall of 2005, Browning met with the district attorney's office on at least three occasions to discuss the case. Attorneys with the office performed their own investigation and determined that it did not appear that Marshall committed a felony offense. One of the attorneys, Eric Dunaway, deposed that, even assuming that the children were telling the truth, there was nevertheless insufficient evidence to present a felony charge to the grand jury. The district attorney's office sent the case to the solicitor-general for consideration of a misdemeanor prosecution. The solicitor-general determined that there was insufficient evidence to successfully pursue misdemeanor charges against Marshall. Accordingly, Marshall was not indicted for a felony or accused of a misdemeanor.
Marshall claims that the trial court erred (i) in holding that there was probable cause for Marshall's prosecution and (ii) in failing to hold that the prosecution of Marshall was with actual malice. We disagree because the evidence shows as a matter of law that Browning acted without actual malice for purposes of the threshold issue of her official immunity.
Malice is an element of malicious prosecution and may be inferred by a total lack of probable cause.
We conclude, and Marshall does not dispute, that Browning, a police detective, was acting within her discretionary authority in investigating the case, obtaining search and arrest warrants, and in executing those warrants.
For purposes of official immunity,
Applying the foregoing, we find that the evidence demands the conclusion that Browning acted without actual malice. There is no evidence that Browning was motivated by a personal animus toward Marshall. Nor is she accused of manufacturing evidence or knowingly presenting perjured testimony.
Although Marshall attacks the children's statements as uncorroborated and lacking credibility, and he asserts that the forensic interviews were contaminated and suggestive, it is well established that a child's uncorroborated testimony may serve as evidence of child molestation.
Given the facts of this case, we conclude that Browning's considered decision to proceed with arrest and search warrants on the basis of the children's statements cannot give rise to an inference that she acted with actual malice. A person commits the offense of child molestation when such person "[d]oes any immoral or indecent act to or in the presence of or with any child under the age of 16 years with the intent to arouse or satisfy the sexual desires of either the child or the person."
Marshall also points to evidence that Browning had acted on her subjective feelings, including a school employee's averment that Browning had announced to people in the office that she "had been molested as a child and she could just tell that Mr. Marshall was guilty." If Browning was motivated by her personal history and her perception that Marshall was guilty, this does not show an intent to do wrong. Moreover, Browning's affidavits in support of the search and arrest warrants were based on her investigation, not her personal feelings. As to Browning's decisions to execute the search and arrest warrants at the same time, to take Marshall to the Fulton County jail as opposed to the Roswell city jail, and to proceed with an arrest with knowledge of the embarrassment and expense that would inevitably ensue, Marshall fails to show that any of her actions were in violation of police procedure or were taken out of actual malice.
Judgment affirmed.
SMITH, P.J., and DILLARD, J., concur.