Cop Who Arrested High Schooler on 'Terrorizing' Charges for Class Joke Gets Qualified Immunity
A judge's blistering dissent is a reminder that this issue does not have to be a partisan one.

A police officer who questionably arrested a high school student on "terrorizing" charges cannot be sued in connection with the incident, a federal court recently ruled. But the decision making that official—along with a fiery dissenting opinion—shows how some facets of criminal justice reform do not have to be partisan.
In February 2018, Lennon Betancourt, a student at Grace King High School in Metairie, Louisiana, was pictured next to a cartoon caricature of himself labeled "Future School Shooter." Though there was perhaps cause for alarm at first glance, the benign circumstances behind the photo became clear shortly thereafter: Betancourt's health teacher, Guy Farber, had been teaching a lesson about school shootings and said that the "typical" culprit was a "white male." Betancourt was the only one in class who fit that bill, culminating in a crass but harmless exchange where students jested that he should spare them from any violent spree. A peer drew the picture, and Betancourt posed with it, while Farber played along with the joke.
When it came to the attention of Sergeant Billy Matranga, a school resource officer, he handcuffed Betancourt, brought him to the police station, and put him in a holding cell before questioning him about the picture. Matranga learned about the less-than-seedy details—including, for instance, that Betancourt also hadn't been the one to post the photo on social media—which were corroborated by another student. Yet he still moved forward with formally arresting Betancourt under Louisiana's "terrorizing" statute, a charge that carries up to 15 years in prison.
Betancourt was transferred to a juvenile detention center where he spent the night and was fitted with an electronic monitoring device. Though the charges were dropped a month later, he was expelled from school.
Despite the strange turn of events leading to Betancourt's arrest, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit awarded Matranga qualified immunity, a legal doctrine that protects local and state government employees from facing civil suits for rights-violations if a plaintiff cannot pinpoint a closely-aligned court precedent that says the misbehavior in question is unconstitutional. It's the same reason why two police officers in Fresno, California, could not be sued after they allegedly stole $225,000 during the execution of a search warrant. Without a ruling explicitly explaining that theft under those circumstances is wrong, the plaintiffs were out of luck.
Here we see a similar level of granularity from the majority at the 5th Circuit—along with a blistering dissent from a judge who is most known for his ultra-conservativism.
"Here, we conclude that Sergeant Matranga is entitled to qualified immunity because his actions did not violate 'clearly established' law," wrote the majority. "Betancourt argues that Sergeant Matranga had no evidence of criminal intent and therefore lacked probable cause. But even so, the court cannot conclude that every reasonable officer with that information would so conclude."
Not everyone agrees. That includes Judge Stuart Kyle Duncan, who was appointed to the bench by former President Donald Trump and grabbed headlines with his hardline stance against rulings in favor of LGBT people. Debates in the criminal justice sphere are often polarized along partisan lines, and mind-numbingly so. Duncan's response to the majority—composed of a Ronald Reagan appointee and a Barack Obama appointee—reminds us that it need not be that way.
"Lennon's arrest was based on an obviously satiric photo (1) that Lennon didn't take, (2) that Lennon didn't post online, and (3) that grew out of a classroom prank Lennon's own teacher was in on," wrote Duncan. "Matranga knew all that—and yet he arrested Lennon, clapped him in jail, and misled the district attorney….Qualified immunity does not protect the officer who orchestrated this outrageous clown show."
At the heart of Duncan's dissent is Louisiana's "terrorizing" statute, which requires the defendant intentionally sent out information that spurred on a violent crime that is "imminent or in progress." But, as Duncan notes, the details of the case should have disabused Matranga of that almost immediately. The "facts dissolved any notion that Lennon had committed terrorizing," concludes Duncan. "No reasonable officer would have concluded there was probable cause to arrest Lennon for terrorizing or for any other crime."
Betancourt's case is likely dead in the water, meaning Matranga will evade civil court. But if Duncan's response is good for something, it's the reminder that giving victims recourse when agents of the state violate their rights is not an issue reserved for any particular party.
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Fuck Joe Biden
Kudos to BB for getting Reason to continue to buy the same story over and over again. That's a helluva con. Still cycling stories from a decade ago. 40 years from now, he will have worked his way up to a cumulative 6 stories across the nation over the last half-century to repeat to outrage new Reason readers.
Umm the QI decision was 2 days ago.
Facts don't matter to partisan fanatics!
You’re talking to Jeff.
Yes, I imagine that Jeff already knows that "Facts don't matter to partisan fanatics" (such as Bluwater). Only feelings and intentions matter! My tribe (and intentions) GOOD; your tribe (and intentions) BAD!
For details, see http://www.churchofsqrls.com/Do_Gooders_Bad/ and http://www.churchofsqrls.com/Jesus_Validated/ .
PS, why do the anti-libertarians (enemies of individual freedom) keep right on, at a rate of 98.739% of them, at adamantly INSISTING on drinking the blood of the libertarian babies, and polluting the purity of our essences?
Wipe that drool off your chin.
You tribalist automatons & marching morons can make up your "facts" willy-nilly... So can I!
Betancourt's health teacher, Guy Farber, had been teaching a lesson about school shootings and said that the "typical" culprit was a "white male." Betancourt was the only one in class who fit that bill, culminating in a crass but harmless exchange where students jested that he should spare them from any violent spree. A peer drew the picture, and Betancourt posed with it, while Farber played along with the joke.
I love 'crass but harmless' jokes! What if the reason why the news covers white school shootings but not black school shootings is strictly attendance-based?
Say what you want that joke is funny.
At a costume part an Asian friend of mine went in a black trench coat and brought toy guns, and wore a Virginia tech liberal arts t-shirt.
Same halarious joke
Like all the online groups with the name ‘Virginia Tech Gun Club’ around that time.
How big of an idiot is Binion? Trump was the CJ reform POTUS.
Democrats want leniency based on demographics, and outrageous process punishment based on ideology.
Democrats say want leniency based on demographics
Fixed it for Joe "Mandatory Minimums" Biden, and Kamala "Tough on Crime" Harris.
Nailed it. California's former Slave Master General used that awful clause in 13A to force (predominantly Black) prisoners to fight fires for $2/hour & Biden worked with segregationist to stop busing in DE and then incarcerated countless Black people with his crime bill.
Reducing qualified immunity was the wedge issue that the Trump white house refused to move on during the police reform negotiations. Try again.
The legal details of this case are probably beyond my ken, but I'm wondering why... if he was under the could of the charges for a month before they were dropped, why he wouldn't have a lawsuit against the city or state?
I think I have interpreted your question correctly, and maybe he does have a lawsuit against them and this is just the QI hearing for the lawsuit against the officer?
Wouldn’t it be a hoot, hear me out, if they had been talking about gang bangers, and LOL, Betancourt had been the only one to fit the profile?!? AmIRight?!? And a classmate had drawn a caricature! With the teacher not only standing by but doing NOTHING?!?! Does anyone think that there might have been a mostly peaceful protest or two and mayhap a different decision on the QI?
Yeah... kinda obvious set of issues there that opens a whole can of worms.
As I indicated above, I love the description of what is obviously a racist joke against the one white kid in class as 'crass but harmless' in the explicit context of the harm the racist joke caused.
I'm a fan of racist jokes as much, and probably more, than the next guy, but the bending over backwards to "don't say racially-motivated hate crime" here puts "mostly peaceful protestor" to shame.
It's a truly astounding level of doublespeak.
Seems like the real problem is the terrorist threat law, which is incredibly vague. And stupid.
I mean, laws have to be written with the reality that cops aren't very bright.
And in this case, it took a month for the charges to be dropped, so it's not like the prosecutor immediately thought it was baseless. Why does he get a month to make a decision, while a cop only has an instant?
And the school apparently thought it mattered enough to expel him.
The school was in a no-win situation. Once a kid is arrested on terrorism charges for making threats to be a school shooter..... well. ... there really isn't much of a chance that a principle is going to be able to stick their neck out and let a possible mass killer in the school.
The same goes for the DA. A cop plops that charge on your desk, you can't just give it a quick glance and say cut him loose. It doesn't work politically.
This is another strong argument against school resource officers. It is bad enough having school administrators dealing with zero tolerance policies and Karen soccer mom pressures to appear tough.... but then toss in a guy with a badge and a gun? Lives can get ruined pretty quick.
Where does the rest of this story go?
The school, the police department and the DA defamed him and caused real harm, both financial and to his reputation, not to mention a false arrest and false imprisonment.
Is that part of the case proceeding?
And fucking up his education process, if not necessarily impacting his actual education.
Absolutely! Get cops out of schools. They run from actual school shooters (and then can't be sued because they have no duty to protect anyone). Thank God no dogs were shot.
Simalarly schools should be operated and attend by people who should know that teachers make up the bottom 10% on the intelligence scale
That's a little harsh. Bottom 10% would be an IQ below 83. I'd bet most teachers can blow at least a 90.
"Simalarly schools should be operated and attend by people who should know that teachers make up the bottom 10% on the intelligence scale"
Spelling mistakes, conjugation errors, and a failure to close your sentence with a period.
And yet you insult the intelligence of teachers? LOL. You should've listened to them a little more it would seem.
You dumb fuck. LOL.
Your logical fallacy is ad hominem.
It is obviously not true that teachers "make up the bottom 10% on the intelligence scale". It is true, however, that education majors "make up the bottom 10% on the intelligence scale" among college students.
True
I'm trying to imagine a universe where Farber wasn't immediately fired. I mean, aside from it being patently false, it's straight up discrimination and bullying of one particular student in the room. Didn't we just have a huge national news """story""" about some concealed handgun license class with a tasteless joke about black people and handguns? But this gets a pass because it's at the expense of white people?
It's only patently false if you're looking at the unabridged facts. There's the category of violence that's used when building the narrative about its frequency, and the category that's used when building the narrative about the "typical perpetrator".
Only one of those categories includes the gang-related violence that makes up maybe 60-70% of firearms homicides. That's why groups like Everytown get to claim there are hundreds of mass shootings every year, but also use the list of a couple dozen incidents dating back to Columbine HS (Klebold and Harris would have turned 41 this year) to "prove" that most are carried out by white males with AR-15s.
Don't even get near the rabbit hole of what groups like Everytown and their media allies consider to constitute a "school shooting", even Mother Jones was debunking the list they'd fabricated to milk outrage over that.
Just another reminder that the police and the schools serve the state.
Okay, so...sue the police department then. And the school for expelling him. The employees may be immune, but their employing entities are not. This kid deserves a BIG payout.
The opinion affirming the dismissal is correct as it is objective and based on the actual facts presented. The dissent is wrong because it's based on subjective opinion, '...it was a joke...' '...no intent..' Everything the dissent claims is true, are questions for a jury not a Judge, based on the facts of the case. That said, the officer certainly over reacted but can't be sued for acting on objective facts - the kid could not offer ONE case in all of jurisprudence to support his lawsuit; in the end they did the right thing - dismissed the charges and expelled him.
Nonsense. Cops make such subjective judgements all day, every day. The takeaway here is that cops don't belong in schools at all.
"based on the actual facts presented.,,,questions for a jury not a Judge"
Pick a story and stick to it, cop succor.
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So, the teacher alleges that the typical drive-by shooting perpetrator is a black male, and then the only male black student in the class is singled out as a "future drive-by shooter," gets arrested, spends a month in juvie...
Oops, sorry, that didn't happen, it was a white kid. Well, that's OK then, just good-natured joshing.
Reason’s rank ideological war against cop is another reason I cancelled my subscription.
Then, the teacher, principle, school board members, and so on have a decision to make. They can either dismiss the officer or take an ass-whipping in court and possibly me once the settlement is in my bank account.
The system cannot be allowed to simply shrug its shoulders and say "sorry you got completely mistreated by a government employee." If the teacher knew it was a joke, he either testifies in the lawsuit on my behalf against the school system or he goes bankrupt defending himself. Principal... same... They are government employees who knew the truth but chose to watch injustice play out. Bankrupt them all.
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