Texas Cop Who Killed Unarmed Man Is Not Entitled to Qualified Immunity
Former Rusk County deputy Shane Iverson can now be sued for the 2022 fatal shooting of Timothy Michael Randall, who was fleeing a traffic stop.

A federal judge in the Eastern District of Texas denied qualified immunity—a legal doctrine that protects local and state government officials from civil liability unless their actions violate a clearly established constitutional right—to Shane Iverson, a former deputy of Rusk County, on May 27. This upholds a previous ruling by Magistrate Judge John D. Love, clearing the way for a civil rights lawsuit to proceed. Iverson fatally shot Timothy Michael Randall, an unarmed 29-year-old, during a traffic stop on September 14, 2022. Randall's family has filed a federal lawsuit alleging excessive force, unlawful arrest, and emotional distress.
Randall was stopped by Iverson around 12:30 a.m. in Turnertown, Texas, for allegedly running a stop sign. Dashcam footage shows the encounter escalated when Iverson attempted to detain Randall, who tried to flee but was fatally shot by a single bullet that struck his chest.
Although a grand jury had previously declined to indict Iverson, citing insufficient grounds for criminal charges, Love and now District Judge Jeremy Kernodle have concluded there is enough evidence to question the constitutionality of Iverson's actions. In particular, Kernodle highlighted video evidence that showed Randall's open hands raised in surrender as he turned to flee, contradicting Iverson's claim of being in imminent danger.
Iverson told investigators that after he asked Randall to step out of the vehicle, he "made a 'furtive gesture' with his right hand that made him think he might have a weapon." During a pat-down, Iverson felt a soft, rectangular object in Randall's pants and, upon squeezing it, detected something small and hard, making him think it might be a mini revolver. It was later revealed to be a meth pipe.
The accompanying dashcam footage shows that during the pat-down, Randall resists Iverson's attempts to restrain him while repeatedly saying, "Officer, I don't have anything on me." Seconds later, Iverson throws Randall to the ground, which he told investigators he did because he was concerned Randall might reach a perceived weapon. Randall quickly recovers and attempts to flee, but is shot by a kneeling Iverson, who alleged he felt threatened in his compromised position and only fired a single shot in self-defense.
Love disputed Iverson's story in his January recommendation concerning qualified immunity. Love questioned Iverson's claim of witnessing a traffic violation from over 1,100 feet away, citing the ambiguity of the dashcam video, reports KLTV, the local ABC News affiliate. There was no evidence of Randall causing bodily injury to Iverson, and his resistance was primarily verbal, with the only physical contact stemming from the officer's escalating use of force. Randall never threatened Iverson with a weapon, and he had not committed a crime causing serious harm, said Love.
Love also noted Iverson issued his warning simultaneously with the fatal shot, rendering it ineffective. Joseph Oxman, who is representing the Randall family, told NBC News, "I think it's the worst police shooting I've ever seen."
Iverson's actions were also criticized by use-of-force experts and former officers like criminology professor David Klinger, who said, "It doesn't make any sense why he shot the guy."
"What really made the defendant's argument for qualified immunity utterly ridiculous is we have the video of everything that happened," Oxman tells Reason. "Judge Love said objectively, not subjectively, objectively, a jury could find that Shane Iverson violated the civil rights of Timothy Michael Randall."
Oxman doesn't necessarily think the trial will set a precedent for future qualified immunity cases or change current laws. However, he's hopeful that the jury will "send a big message to law enforcement [that] they better get their act together."
Qualified immunity expert Benson Varghese agrees, telling Reason that the ruling doesn't reflect a shift in the court's approach to qualified immunity, but rather the egregious nature of the case. "We have an unarmed victim with empty hands that were visible to the officer," Varghese explains. "The officer's justification for the shooting was weak…we have a clear video that shows the victim fleeing without posing a threat." Courts, he adds, are increasingly relying on objective video evidence over officers' subjective beliefs—the exact reasoning used by both Love and Kernodle in denying qualified immunity.
Iverson's attorney, Robert Davis, the Rusk County District Attorney's Office, and the Rusk County Sheriff's Office did not respond to Reason's request for comment.
The rejection of Iverson's qualified immunity claim is a rare and notable victory for civil liberties advocates who've long argued that the doctrine shields law enforcement officers who abuse their power from legal repercussions. The trial to determine whether Iverson violated Randall's constitutional rights is scheduled to begin May 18, 2026.
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Officer Byrd is sweating.
Wasn’t he pardoned for his heroism?
Given a medal. Didn’t even need the pardon.
I love it when things are worse than I remember.
…and a promotion to boot.
Who would’ve thought shooting an unarmed Air Force veteran would be so rewarding?
Although a grand jury had previously declined to indict Iverson, citing insufficient grounds for criminal charges
A grand jury can indict a ham sandwich, but they can’t indict a pig. Only explanation is that the prosecutor didn’t want an indictment and only went through the motions to appease to the press.
Oxman doesn’t necessarily think the trial will set a precedent for future qualified immunity cases or change current laws. However, he’s hopeful that the jury will “send a big message to law enforcement [that] they better get their act together.”
Here’s the big message. If they murder an unarmed man then they keep their job, get paid overtime to go to court, and if they lose a civil suit the taxpayers foot the bill. I’m sure that will have cops all across the country shaking in their jackboots.
Oh, I almost forgot. You didn’t complain when Saint Babbitt was murdered you hypocrite! That means you can’t talk about police shootings and makes whatever they do ok!
You cheered and defended officer Byrd. Even acknowledging the blind shoot.
I back the blue when they’re right. In this case, as you very well know, the cop didn’t know she was unarmed and from his vantage point he couldn’t see the crowd. He just saw someone crawling through a smashed barricade while hearing chaos on the police radio. So based upon what he knew based upon what he could see and hear, he did what he thought was right.
Who said this again sarc? Has your name on it.
Just remember that he doesn’t actually believe in anything.
He just craves attention from anyone who’ll give him some.
So, when is this cop going to be arrested for murder, or at least manslaughter?
Oh, that’s right.
He’s a government employee and can do no wrong.
My bad.
The rejection of Iverson’s qualified immunity claim is a rare and notable victory for civil liberties advocates who’ve long argued that the doctrine shields law enforcement officers who abuse their power from legal repercussions.
Abuse their power from civil repercussions. Assuming everything that happened in the traffic stop is exactly as described in the article, it seems a no-brainer that he’d be ineligible for a QI defense. Unfortunately, again, assuming everything happened as described, and considering the officer’s actions met the notoriously high bar of a QI exception, I’m more shocked that the officer wasn’t charged with a crime, or at least fired from his fucking job. This is the problem when you focus on QI as the ultimate end of justice. I assume the family is suing the county, because if your family member was killed by an officer who couldn’t even survive a QI defense while every experts nods in agreement that this was an egregious use of force, I’m not sure I feel a fist-pumping-in-the-air sense of justice over suing a guy making sixty two five a year with two ex-wives, alimony and child support payments. I mean sure, maybe he’ll be forced to sell that old jet ski under the tarp in his side yard, but his court mandated $115 a month to the family (if they win the lawsuit) rings a bit hollow in the justice column.
Indeed. and the unconstitutionality, from the description, seems to have started with the pat down.
Only after the pat-down is there anything mentioned about safety. And that is required.
SCOTUS Arizona v Johnson:
“To justify a patdown of the driver or a passenger during a traffic stop, however, just as in the case of a pedestrian reasonably suspected of criminal activity, the police must harbor reasonable suspicion that the person subjected to the frisk is armed and dangerous.”
TEXAS State v Shepherd:
“It is not enough that the officer has an inchoate or unparticularized suspicion or hunch.”
And
Griffin v. State:
“A frisk for weapons is permissible only when the officer has a reasonable belief that the person is armed and presently dangerous.”
Now, I have not seen the footage, but from the reports nothing indicates the cop had a qualifying reason for the frisk. In fact, that he got down on a knee to do it alone, in the middle of the night, without restraining him is strong evidence he didn’t have it.
Edit: watched it. Not only did he not have it he conducted an illegal search in the process.
Summary:
You blew through that stop sign back there
No I didn’t I came to a complete stop.
No you didn’t
Yes I did
No, now get out
Okay, I stopped, can you show me –
i said get out
Ok
Turn around. Starts to pat down, immediately sticks his hands in the guy’s front pocket (illegally). Tells hil to put his hands behind his back.
No physical resistance just asking questions about what is going on.
Poor attempt a a body slam. Also illegal.
Another attempt to slam him to the ground. Draws gun while the guy is getting up, says “get down” as he fires.
So I also need to adjust the”on his knee” part earlier. The article description wasn’t accurate on that part as it happened after the force escalation without sufficient reason. But he did start the rights violation within seconds and well before the shooting.
There was no evidence of Randall causing bodily injury to Iverson, and his resistance was primarily verbal, with the only physical contact stemming from the officer’s escalating use of force.
The officer forgot to say, “Stop resisting!” He deserves to get sued if he can’t even put in a minimum of effort before he escalates to violence.
“There must be more to the story,” “It’s the D.A.’s fault,” “The skell must’ve done something bad at some point in time,” and other cop-glucking chestnuts…
Always with the most sympathetic cases, right Reason?
raised in surrender as he turned to flee
Um…
Randall resists Iverson’s attempts to restrain him while repeatedly saying, “Officer, I don’t have anything on me.” Seconds later, Iverson throws Randall to the ground, which he told investigators he did because he was concerned Randall might reach a perceived weapon. Randall quickly recovers and attempts to flee
Um……..
“I think it’s the worst police shooting I’ve ever seen.”
I mean, I’m not going to say it was a good one. I just wonder what kind of mileage the ACAB losertarians think they’re going to get out of a resisting, fighting, and then fleeing methhead getting iced. “Oxman doesn’t necessarily think the trial will set a precedent for future qualified immunity cases or change current laws. … the ruling doesn’t reflect a shift in the court’s approach to qualified immunity, but rather the egregious nature of the case.”
Because it won’t. It was a bad shoot, not a condemnation of QI.
But that’s not the message that Reason leaves us with, is it. They go with, “Be a druggie, run from the cops, they’re the bad guys here.”
Clown world.
The message is “The police can’t kill unarmed fleeing suspects and claim it was done in self defense.” At least, in civil cases. The next step is to see if this cop gets charged criminally.
raised in surrender as he turned to flee
Make it make sense, Chip.
Sure.
Kernodle highlighted video evidence that showed Randall’s open hands raised in surrender as he turned to flee, contradicting Iverson’s claim of being in imminent danger.
You see, the cop claimed he had to shoot Randall in self defense when that turned out to be a lie. It helps if you read more than eight words in an article.
Oxman doesn’t necessarily think the trial will set a precedent for future qualified immunity cases or change current laws.
Why the fuck would it. These rulings are so arbitrary and random that how could it possibly move the needle? No trigger happy, jittery warrior cop is going to look at this and think it would ever apply to him.
One court, one judge, one case, one opinion. It’s the future of Qualified Immunity!
“We’re going to give our police their power back,” he told rallygoers in Waukesha, “and we are going to give them immunity from prosecution.”
“upon squeezing it, detected something small and hard”