Supreme Court Makes It Effectively Impossible To Sue Federal Cops, Smashing a 51-Year-Old Precedent
A federal badge will now serve as an impenetrable shield against civil liability.

Reports that the U.S. Supreme Court is poised to overturn one of its major precedents recently gripped much of the country. Today, the high court effectively did just that.
Except it wasn't Roe v. Wade—the case that established a constitutional right to an abortion—that the justices declared null. It was a different early-1970s precedent with far-reaching implications for anyone who has their rights violated by federal government agents.
Going forward, such victims will essentially have no recourse against those rogue actors. A federal badge will now serve as an impenetrable shield against civil liability for violating the same laws agents are charged with upholding.
You'd be forgiven for having never heard of it, as these cases tend to cruise under the radar. But you'd really be forgiven this time, seeing as the Supreme Court partially opted to dismantle Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics—its 1971 decision that allowed a man to sue federal officers who searched his home without a warrant and then strip-searched him at a courthouse—not by hearing a case and deciding on the merits but by refusing to do that.
The justices announced today—exactly 51 years after the Court handed down Bivens—that they would decline to consider two major petitions. In the first, St. Paul Police Department Officer Heather Weyker, who was serving on a federal task force, conjured a fake sex-trafficking ring and jailed a teenage girl for two years on trumped-up charges. In the second, Department of Homeland Security Agent Ray Lamb allegedly tried to kill a man who had a personal beef with Lamb's son; video appears to show Lamb attempting to pull the trigger of his gun, though it jammed.
Federal courts in both cases agreed with what may sound intuitive: Both Weyker and Lamb violated clearly established law. They are thus not protected by qualified immunity, the legal doctrine that can make it difficult to sue local and state actors when they violate the Constitution. But because they were working for the federal government, they are protected by absolute immunity, the courts said, and their victims—Hamdi Mohamud and Kevin Byrd, respectively—may not sue them for disgracing their positions.
"Today, on the 51st anniversary of Bivens, the Supreme Court overturned Bivens," says Anya Bidwell, an attorney at the Institute for Justice, the public interest law firm representing both Mohamud and Byrd. "They are not explicitly saying it, but they are effectively doing it."
The explicit part of that puzzle came two weeks back when the high court ruled that a Customs and Border Protection (CBP) officer—who allegedly assaulted the owner of a bed and breakfast and then sent the IRS after him for lodging a complaint—cannot be sued for violating the First and Fourth Amendments. This overturned a lower court decision that came to the opposite conclusion and etched in stone that immigration agents are, in some sense, above the law.
But neither Weyker nor Lamb were acting in a context that remotely resembled immigration enforcement. By demurring at hearing those cases, the Supreme Court has upheld the decisions giving both officers absolute immunity for committing transgressions while policing domestically. "Today's rulings are basically saying that you can never sue federal officials, period," notes Bidwell.
What's ironic, however, is that the U.S. government—which isn't exactly known for supporting accountability—admitted before the Supreme Court that there should be instances in which a victim can sue federal officers. More ironic is that Michael Huston, assistant to the solicitor general, made that argument during oral arguments for Egbert v. Boule, the case concerning the rogue CBP agent. Most ironic: The circumstances Huston outlined as the right and proper context to sue federal officials fit both Mohamud's and Byrd's petitions.
Chief Justice John Roberts: Mr. Huston, give me a hypothetical case where your office would say Bivens permits a cause of action.
Huston: Sure, Your Honor. In a case involving an FBI agent or an agent of the Park Police or the Marshals Service, something other than the Federal Bureau of Narcotics or its successor, the DEA, but that is a routine domestic search-and-seizure claim or a [sic] excessive force claim.
Yet the Supreme Court covertly declined to leave those vestiges behind after ravaging its own 1971 decision. "Overturning precedent is generally disfavored activity," adds Bidwell. "But when the Court does it, it should at least have the courage of its convictions and stand up and tell the public."
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The problem is not with the Court, it is with the legislature. Just because the law is immoral and unfair does not mean it is unconstitutional and illegal. The legislature writes the law, the Courts just determine what they wrote means. The law needs to change to handle this issue and several others.
Not sure on that.
Title 18 sections 241 and 242 are pretty specific. Congress excluded themselves and any and all judges. Then SCOTUS created the qualified immunity precedent to further thwart that law and now has eliminated another precedent to completely obliterate the law the Congress passed.
What more can Congress do?
Section 1983 which allows people to sue state/local law enforcement for rights violations, on it's face does not apply to federal agents.
That's what Bivens, a court created doctrine was for. As a start, Congress could get off it's ass and add federal agents to 1983.
Thank you.
This clarifies it for me.
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Thanks. This outcome seemed too fucked up to be anything but a shitty law.
This!
A section 1983 wasn't necessary for federal officers. There's a long tradition of suing federal officers for rights violations, from the founding through at least the end of the 19th century, and the courts routinely allowed judgments against the individual officers without any sort of applicable immunity.
(Congress could later choose to indemnify an officer if it believed he behaved reasonably, and often did, but the citizen still received their judgment all the same).
Conscription of young males into the gas-filled trenches of Europe or clutches of suicide berserkers of Asia does or does not violate the 13th Amendment? Now, let's suppose the Russians quit supporting the belligerents to whom" our" banks loaned money... Now is it constitutional? Mencken soon suggested a vacancy could be created by setting the right gown alight.
We all appreciate your insightful contributions to the site. I hope you continue to earn internet privileges at the home by following the rules, although I suspect you’re cheeking some of your meds.
No, the people need to change their belief that coercive govt., i.e., an elite with a moral/legal blank check, is anti-reason, anti-rights, inhuman. All empires were built on this political paradigm. All fell.
Now the federal government has henchmen with impunity.
I’m sure that excites you. It will help with the rise of the new Gestapo. So you can give Holocaust 2.0 a shot.
Yes, Jews and Nazis working together again as they did during WW2 and today in Ukraine was and is the formula for death.
Jewish Freemason satanists recognize no difference between good and evil. Just like Hitlers similar but opposing secret society. They represents the greatest threat to civilization today.
Here’s what the JEWS have to say about THEIR ownership of Freemasonry!
THE JEWISH TRIBUNE, New York, Oct. 28, 1927, Cheshvan 2, 5688, Vol. 91, No. 18: “Masonry is based on Judaism. Eliminate the teachings of Judaism from the Masonic ritual and what is left?”
LA VERITE ISRAELITE, Jewish paper 1861, IV, page 74: “The spirit of Freemasonry is the spirit of Judaism in its most fundamental beliefs; it is its ideas, its language, it is mostly its organization, the hopes which enlighten and support Israel. It’s crowning will be that wonderful prayer house of which Jerusalem will be the triumphal centre and symbol.”
LE SYMBOLISM, July, 1928: “The most important duty of the Freemason must be to glorify the Jewish Race, which has preserved the unchanged divine standard of wisdom. You must rely upon the Jewish race to dissolve all frontiers.”
AN ENCYCLOPEDIA OF FREEMASONRY,Philadelphia, 1906: “Each Lodge is and must be a symbol of the Jewish temple; each Master in the Chair, a representative of the Jewish King; and every Mason a personification of the Jewish workman.”
MANUAL OF FREEMASONRY, by Richard Carlile: “The Grand Lodge Masonry of the present day is wholly Jewish.”
THE FREEMASON, April 2, 1930, quoting Br. Rev. S. McGowan: “Freemasonry is founded on the ancient law of Israel. Israel has given birth to the moral beauty which forms the basis of Freemasonry.”
Rabbi Br. Isaac Wise, in The Israelite of America, March 8, 1866: “Masonry is a Jewish institution whose history, degrees, charges, passwords and explanations are Jewish from beginning to end.”
Benjamin Disraeli, Jew, Prime Minister of England, in The Life of Lord George Bentick: “At the head of all those secret societies, which form provisional governments, men of the Jewish race are to be found.”
LATOMIA, a German Masonic journal, Vol. 12, July 1849, Page 237: “We cannot help but greet socialism (Marxism – Communism) as an excellent comrade of Freemasonry for ennobling mankind, for helping to further human welfare. Socialism and Freemasonry, together with Communism are sprung from the same source.”
BERNARD STILLMAN, Jew, in Hebraic influences on Masonic Symbolism, 1929, quoted The Masonic News, London: “I think I have proved sufficiently that Freemasonry, as what concurs symbolism, lays entirely on a formation which is essentially Jewish.”
O.B. Good, M.A. in The Hidden Hand of Judah, 1936: “The influence of the Jewish Sanhedrin is today more powerful than ever in Freemasonry.”
JEWISH ENCYCLOPEDIA, 1903, Vol, 5, page 503: “The technical language, symbolism and rites of Freemasonry are full of Jewish ideas and terms ... In the Scottish Rite, the dates on official documents are given according to the era and months of the Jewish calendar, and use is made of the Hebraic alphabet.”
B’NAI B’RITH MAGAZINE, Vol. 13, page 8, quoting rabbi and mason Magnin: “The B’nai B’rith are but a makeshift. Everywhere that Freemasonry can admit that it is Jewish in its nature as well as in its aims, the ordinary lodges are sufficient for the task.
The ADL (Anti-Defamation League) of B’nai B’rith is a totally Jewish controlled organization with its main goal to destroy Christianity. (Also, the B’nai B’rith form a super-Masonic lodge where no “Gentiles” are admitted.)
TRANSACTIONS OF THE JEWISH HISTORICAL SOCIETY Vol. 2, p 156: “The Coat of Arms used by the Grand Lodge of England is entirely composed of Jewish symbols. FREEMASONS WORSHIP LUCIFER!
THE FREEMASONRY, Jan 19, 1935, quoting instructions by Albert Pike, who simultaneously was Grand Master of the Central Directory of Washington, Grand Commander of the Supreme Council of Charleston, Sovereign Pontiff of Universal Freemasonry: “That which we must say to the crowd is – We worship a God, but it is the God that one adores without superstition. To you, Sovereign Grand Inspectors General, we say this, That you may repeat it to the Brethren of the 32nd, 31st, and 30th degrees –
THE MASONIC RELIGION should be by all of us initiates of the high degrees, maintained in the purity of THE LUCIFERIAN DOCTRINE. . . Yes, LUCIFER IS GOD.”
Next up, links between the Shriners and the Lizardmen...
Hahaha
Not much will change; few suits were brought, as the government will break your bank first.
Sometimes I think the federal government is over it all, and wouldn’t mind it if a Caesar came along.
Sometimes I think that strange women dispensing swords from the bottom of lakes is a solid foundation for a system of government.
one ring to rule them all, baby.
Just keep kissing frogs.
You mean some watery bint?
You can't expect to wield supreme power just because some watery tart threw a sword at you.
If I went around saying I was emperor just because some moistened bint lobbed a scimitar at me, they'd put me away.
there's the violence inherent in the system!
We'll go with that watery tart, if we're smart!
Ultimately, I'd go for a benevolent dictatorship. Though benevolence would likely disappear as soon as one had absolute power.
This is literally not true. The FTCA exists:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federal_Tort_Claims_Act
I'm happy to agree there are issues with it, and even that the legislature should open things up to allow direct suing of federal officers, but saying there is no recourse is to ignore the simple fact that there is.
Bivens created a precedent that allowed judges to create cause of action outside those defined by the legislature. This is the judiciary clawing back its powers and putting them back in the legislature where they should belong. I know this is a very proceduralist argument, but procedure matters and having the various branches restricted to act within their proper authority is essential to the proper function of our nation.
Keep this in mind the next time you complain about Executive overreach. Remember that you bitched about the Judiciary attempting to corral its own overreach.
There's a lot of issues here, but pushing this back into the legislature actually brings it into a place where it can be better resolved.
I am also willing to theorize that we're moving towards a removal of qualified immunity and possibly other immunities with this decision as it indicates a direction where the Judiciary is trying to remove authority claims it has made in areas normally reserved to that of the legislature.
What pisses me off the most is that this probably works. These are very subtle questions, and articles like this blow through those questions and just get angry about the outcome, leaving people unaware that there are actual serious questions at play here that led to where we are.
This is so especially true in higher court opinions where the outcome is almost always less important then the reasoning as that's what sets doctrine.
Sorry, I got so pissed off I didn't complete a thought.
"What pisses me off the most is that this probably works. People unfamiliar with the issue read this and presume what's being said is accurate."
Ah, like in the Two Minutes Hate: "Goldstein was delivering his usual venomous attack upon the doctrines of the Party -- an attack so exaggerated and perverse that a child should have been able to see through it, and yet just plausible enough to fill one with an alarmed feeling that other people, less level-headed than oneself, might be taken in by it." Your goodthinkful alertness against thoughtcrime is a credit to the MAGA Party, comrade sockpuppet.
Yes, Hank. We know you like to produce bad faith readings of comments.
Hank is a big part of why the LP is seen as a bunch of crackpots by so many.
Anyone presuming Reason articles/statements are accurate is doing it wrong
Reason is all about outcomes.
This is a great explanation to use when people wonder why judicial activism is a thing or where it came from.
Very few people feel the feds should be above the law, but just because we mostly agree on an issue doesn't mean that BAMN should become the standard.
You're spot on about the article encouraging us only to be angry about the outcome. I like to use the corollary of a tried and true idiom. If it sounds too bad to be true, that's because it is. Many people have said I am naive about the intentions of others, but when I see respectable and intelligent people doing something that doesn't make sense, I'm more inclined to believe that I don't know and/or understand their reasons.
The current Court appears to be very focused on procedural issues and reversing the damage of judicial activism.
PLUS the SC just declined to review the petitions - they didn't make any precedent setting rulings. There could be many reasons for that, chief among them the justices who want to overturn it didn't have enough votes. So instead of allowing a ruling that changes the game, they just let things as is.
I hope you're right. There's always more than meets the eye.
Not making a decision is not making a decision. This article is ridiculous hyperbole. It's unfortunate that the SCOTUS didn't take the time to make a decision on these cases, but that's not the same as overturning Bivens. These sorts of cases can continue to be made and the appeals courts cannot point to the Supreme Court's declination as a reason to rule one way or another. It simply means the ambiguity remains.
This.
A denial of certiorari has no precedential value whatsoever. It cannot be read as meaning the Court agreed or disagreed with the decisions below. And denials of certiorari do not overrule existing established precedent. It’s what they teach you day one in law school.
I thought day one consisted of how to hire an accountant.
"A day without billing is like a day without sunshine"
It not giving is taking!!!1!1!!1!
>>video appears to show Lamb attempting to pull the trigger of his gun, though it jammed
crime of violence?
So not all guns are violent machines of mass destruction?
you wanted your right-wing judges, now lie in your bed.
Robert’s is hardly right wing.
This helps explain the sudden popularity of malcontents shooting judges and cops. As soon as Reagan won, Army of God terrorists began shooting doctors, women and bystanders. Now altruists of a slightly different persuasion are following that example down to the graffiti. "Wherefore by their fruits ye shall know them" says the Demonology. Monkey see, monkey do.
There’s that anti religion bigotry you’re famous for.
Hahahahahahaha
There's an important difference between the Supremes making a bad ruling vs deciding not to take up a case. The latter sets no precedent. The issue remains alive, and nothing prevents the court from taking up a qualified immunity case next term.
Every term, there are lots of worthy cases that the Supremes decline to take up. There's a limit to how many cases they can handle.
I don't agree and I will test it soon. If the court's waive their jurisdiction through arguments of immunity over complaints of substantial injuries prohibited by the constitution, the injuries and the issues still exist but the court's jurisdiction to rectify its mistake or complicity is gone. Certain constitutional protections which aren't protected through "civil" process should lead to justiciable self-help and "incivility", outside court's jurisdiction. Is there precedent or legal doctrine that says this isn't accurate? I assume the court's jurisdiction could then be re-established under a different context of say criminal prosecution against a self-helping individual, but then immunity of the government to civil liability for constitutional violations is certain to become the big issue which the courts were evading in the first place.
Really this sounds like the court simply didn't take the case but that the situation is more the purview of the legislatures anyhow. The problem is for the past half century the legislature has mainly abdicated it's authority to the other two branches. Open ended laws that leave it to the discretion of the Executive Branch to write the rules, purposely ambiguous laws that leave it to the courts to devine meaning etc. It's a bad situation but not one created by the current USSC, but one that previous courts have contributed to by taking up the mantle of making and deciding meaning. Rather than aiming our anger at the court that refuses to play along, maybe we should aim it at where it's really deserved, the legislatures who don't do their jobs and us who have allowed them to get away with it for five decades.
Color me entirely unsurprised to find more considered and reasoned takes in the comment section.
But all for the best, leave the pants shitting to the experts.
Why is there no discussion of why these blatantly illegal actions did not result in criminal charges? That is the real problem.
It took a lot of beating me up for me finally realize this crap is all about civil suits, not criminal. The real problem is that there is no way for civilians to force a prosecutor to take action against his comrade in arms.
From what I've seen criminal law doesn't apply to agents of the government. They follow policy and procedure. If they had to worry about the law they wouldn't be able to do their jobs. Violating policy, like not shooting someone who isn't a threat because they're holding a gun and refusing to obey, can get a cop fired. The law not so much.
It's a sure way to encourage vigilantism against agents of the state. Not saying that's good or bad but it's definitely a potential reality.
Yep. The court of final appeal is presided over by judge Colt.
So it looks like the hyper racialized process in Hollywood and the constant need to race-swap characters, putting in someone with black skin isn't enough. So they have to "act black" as well. What happens when you write a character and create costumes for them that is "authentically black"?
Well, as you'd guess, the hyper race consciousness folds in on itself and becomes racist.
So "black Thor" wears Air Jordans, lives in "the hood", has graffiti tagging on his hammer and says stuff like "Hammer time" when he invokes his powers.
I shit you not.
I wonder if Marvel/Disney give a fuck that they're appropriating Scando-Germanic culture in ways they'd never tolerate appropriate say a white black panther? And black panther's character isn't even based on real mythology, whereas Thor completely is. Here is an idea, I won't shit all over your heritage if you don't shit all over mine.
I would really care less if it wasn't for the double standard. I'm not a neo-paganist, but there are several and they do worship Thor (my cousin is one of them). Would you change or even represent Mohammed? I don't think so, but it's okay to crap all over someone who is of European descent's religion?
Yes. Because Europeans have held all of the power for the past 2000 years.
Why have they held such power in the world for so long? Racism and sexism. So white culture literally has racism and sexism naked into them and as we all know, you can’t oppress those who have been born into power.
Ottoman Empire.
*drops microphone*
I wonder if Marvel/Disney give a fuck that they're appropriating Scando-Germanic culture in ways they'd never tolerate appropriate say a white black panther?
Dude.... White people are the oppressors. So it's not possible to appropriate culture from white people, just like being racist against white people is not possible. Victim hierarchy and all that.
Yeah, where's my diversity in Wakanda... or Rwanda, or whatever it's called.
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don't help border jumpers
Sorry, the Constitution, not the S. Ct. has made it 'effectively impossible'...... Why libertarians constantly honor and expect and support judicial activism by Courts is a mystery to me.
SCOTUS: It's "the law is the law" for you, not for us (those in our very exclusive club).
If you want fairness, justice, you might stop supporting a coercive political paradigm, e.g., stop voting, stop paying taxes.
Neither of the delusions called qualified immunity or absolute immunity exist in the Constitution. Both need to be destroyed ASAP. But how can that be done without modern minutemen?