The FBI Wrongly Raided a Georgia Family's Home. Now Their Case Is Going to the Supreme Court.
A federal court ruled Trina Martin could not sue the government after agents burst into her home and held an innocent man at gunpoint.

On an early morning in 2017, Trina Martin was shocked by a pyrotechnic exhibit she compares to the Fourth of July. Except it was October, and it was inside her home in Georgia.
The FBI detonated a flash-bang in the house and ripped the door from its hinges to arrest Joseph Riley, a man who lived in a different house approximately one block over. The agents would not realize their mistake until after they stormed into Martin's bedroom, handcuffing her then-fiancé, Toi Cliatt, at gunpoint.
In January, the Supreme Court announced it will evaluate whether a federal court ruled correctly when it barred Martin from suing over that nightmare scenario, in the case Martin vs. United States.
The two houses "share several conspicuous features," wrote the 11th Circuit in its ruling, such as that they are "beige in color" and have "a large tree in the front." Since it was dark outside, the judges said, it would have been "difficult to ascertain the house numbers on the mailboxes." Lawrence Guerra, who led the raid, thus received immunity.
The Court won't reconsider that conclusion. Instead, it will evaluate a part of the decision that forbade a different avenue of potential legal relief.
Martin and Cliatt also sued under the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA), which allows victims of abuse to bring certain state torts against the federal government. The 11th Circuit closed off that avenue as well, ruling the suit was doomed because the FBI had "discretion" in how it prepares to carry out warrants. The judges also cited the Supremacy Clause, which supposedly ensures that states do not get in the way of executing federal law. Since the agents' acts had "some nexus with furthering federal policy" and could "reasonably be characterized as complying with the full range of federal law," the 11th Circuit said any claim under the FTCA could not proceed.
Yet the FTCA was revised in the 1970s to include a proviso specifically allowing victims like Martin to sue the federal government. A bipartisan group in Congress, including Sen. Rand Paul (R–Ky.), had urged the Court to take up the case for that reason.
Congress updated the FTCA back then because of a gross abuse of police power. In April 1973, federal agents targeted the homes of Herbert and Evelyn Giglotto and Donald and Virginia Askew. Neither family was suspected of a crime. "Mr. and Mrs. Giglotto testified under oath today that they were handcuffed by screaming agents, thrown on their bed, verbally abused with a stream of obscenities and repeatedly threatened with death while an agent held a cocked gun to Mr. Giglotto's head," wrote The New York Times, reporting on testimony before the Senate in May 1973. "Much of their apartment was ransacked and damaged."
Despite the obvious parallels with what Martin experienced in the very case that inspired the FTCA update, she was deprived of recourse by the 11th Circuit—giving the Supreme Court an opportunity to send a reminder that it is the judiciary's job to interpret the law, not rewrite it.
This article originally appeared in print under the headline "Supreme Court Takes Up Wrong-House Raids."
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How drunk were you when you wrote this Beebee?
I've read it three times, and I'm still trying to figure out where you're going with it.
The Court won't reconsider that conclusion. Instead, it will evaluate a part of the decision that forbade a different avenue of potential legal relief.
Martin and Cliatt also sued under the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA), which allows victims of abuse to bring certain state torts against the federal government.
K.... but you made no effort whatsoever to explain what the FTCA is or how it applies here. I mean, apparently this is what the court is going to look at - but you're so obsessed with narrative that you forget to inform your reader. Of anything.
"Mr. and Mrs. Giglotto testified under oath today that they were handcuffed by screaming agents, thrown on their bed, verbally abused with a stream of obscenities and repeatedly threatened with death while an agent held a cocked gun to Mr. Giglotto's head,"
Oh my gosh *faints to the couch in a dramatic fashion*
K... but what does that have to do with Martin and Cliatt?
she was deprived of recourse by the 11th Circuit—giving the Supreme Court an opportunity to send a reminder that it is the judiciary's job to interpret the law, not rewrite it.
K... but you haven't made any effort to tell anyone HOW they "rewrote" it. Just that they found the Feeb's conduct to be reasonable under the circumstances.
Which, yea, it might NOT have been. But you're making no effort to explain anything to anyone.
You're wojaking this thing super hard. HURR DURR COPS BAD DUMB BAD BADS. ME HOPE CORTS LIEK FIX OR SOMTHNG.
Why are you this retarded, and how/why does anyone employ you?
Re-write the whole article for us, please, Oh Great Wise And Uber-Literate One, and post it here for us... I will bet that the Reason editors will notice Your PerFectly Spectacular Writing, and offer You a VERY well-paying job! Then You can FINALLY get out of Your Mom's PervFectly Decorated de-basement!
I can't wait for the first AT article "The Libertarian Case for Accepting Police Misconduct"
I didn't say anything about the police's conduct.
"HURR DURR COPS BAD DUMB BAD BADS. ME HOPE CORTS LIEK FIX OR SOMTHNG."
You made sub-moronic grade-school-type mockery of those who are smarter, more thoughtful, and more concerned about reining in police abuse, in the name of simple justice... Than You Soooo PervFectly Are! Ass even any simple-minded reader can see, You PervFectly sympathize with abusive police, and take the side AGAINST those who would like to fix this problem!
What he did was ask for clarification what happened which seems entirely reasonable. Let's face it Reason regularly omits pertinent facts to spin a narrative. Asking for more information should be a default setting when reading their outrage du jour.
"HURR DURR COPS BAD DUMB BAD BADS. ME HOPE CORTS LIEK FIX OR SOMTHNG."
"...which seems entirely reasonable..." to grade-school authoritarian school-yard bullies who obviously have an ax or seventy-two to grind!
That had nothing to do with the police's conduct. It has to do with LoL JoUrNaLiSt BeeBee's article.
Hey, I'm in the market for some new kneepads. What brand do you find most comfortable?
It was dark? That's what a flashlight is for...
Lame reasoning by the judges.
Especially since darkness was entirely predictable, as it occurred every day at about the same time as it did the days before. On The Simpson's, Chief Wiggum's description of a suspect as "male, and hatless. I repeat, hatless" was played as joke, but in the 11th Circuit an even lamer description was judged "Good enough!"
"beige in color" and have "a large tree in the front." Since it was dark outside,
So no surveillance prior; that's missed overtime and a workers compensation hazard. Surprised they didn't throw the book at Guerra for those infractions.
They looked pissed in that picture. (and the woman looks a bit entitled)
The word you are looking for is uppity.
Another victim of Trump's trade war. That bastard.
It seems possible that the next revolution may come from excesses of the courts, not the executive.
Since it was dark outside, the judges said, it would have been "difficult to ascertain the house numbers on the mailboxes."
Imagine if there were, like, a portable light source people could carry with them when it was dark. Someone should get around to inventing such a novel device.
I bet it would even be possible to attach such a thing to a rifle somehow!
And turn it into an assault weapon!?
2017? Trump was president so it's ok. Had it happened on a Democrat's watch that would be totally different.
Fantastic, we finally found FBI harassment that Sarcasmic and Reason can oppose.
The attacks of Catholics, PTA parents, pro-lifers, etc. are local stories and probably evil MAGA and must be ignored, but Sarcasmic found a story he can tenuously connect to Orange Hitler and pretend he still has some libertarian bonafides.
Marxist-Necrophiliac Moose-Mammary cunt understand sarcasm... Maybe Sarcasmic should get a new handle to help Her out? Sarcasmic The Cosmically Sarcastic, perhaps?
Not reading this article, but it does seem like BS that if the government agency can fuck something up royally, the person they fucked over cannot get any restitution.
That's why QI was invented.
Could you imagine the pricetag if someone ( *cough* taxpayers ) had to pay for every time LE broke somebody's stuff ? Madness !
Well, someone is paying for it, regardless. How does shifting the cost increase it?
You have to pay the cost-shifters, ass well ass their lawyers, accountants, parasites, rent-seekers, and trolls under the bridge!
Require all police officers to carry a personal liability policy against abuse and/or mistakes leading to harm. Provide the reasonable cost of such a policy to each officer as a part of their compensation. If a particular officer is found liable on a regular basis, the cost of his insurance will increase, forcing him to pay the extra. Eventually, that officer won't be insurable. Can't remember who first came up with this but it seemed a reasonable way to mitigate the issue.
Look, the last thing we should want is for police to think before shooting someone, or check the address on a house before smashing the doors in.
I think the SC wont find the agents liable
If they did, every wrong door raid would need to be paid out, and/or the agents disciplined and why would the govt want that?
They are all on the same team after all
(Hope I’m wrong)
That doesn't look like Trump's family!
Courts can be really disgusting. Using darkness as an excuse for raiding the wrong house?!? Great goobly moogly how does anyone get delivery after dark?