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Supreme Court

Thomas and Alito Take a Regrettable Position in a Qualified Immunity Case

The two judicial conservatives continue to disappoint criminal justice reform advocates.

Damon Root | 5.28.2026 11:50 AM

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Law enforcement officer standing in front of court house | Illustration: Midjourney
(Illustration: Midjourney)

Qualified immunity is a judge-made doctrine that routinely shields bad cops from facing civil lawsuits over their abusive and unconstitutional behavior. All too often, a federal judge will hear a case in which a clear constitutional violation occurred, only to then shield the offending officer anyway from facing civil liability over the blatant misconduct. It's a legal doctrine that deserves to be abolished.

Occasionally, however, the officer will lose one of these cases, and qualified immunity will be denied. That's what happened last year in Hart v. Grand Rapids, in which the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit actually let a federal civil rights lawsuit proceed against a Michigan police officer whose use of deadly force against a protester was officially reprimanded by his own superiors because of how the officer's actions violated the department's training and procedures.

That officer subsequently appealed his loss to the U.S. Supreme Court, which finally turned him down earlier this week, thereby leaving the 6th Circuit's denial of qualified immunity undisturbed. The civil rights suit against the officer will now move forward in federal court, a welcome result. To be clear, the officer may still prevail in the end, but at least his alleged victim will now get the chance to seek redress for a credible constitutional rights violation.

What makes this case especially notable, in addition to the all-too-rare denial of qualified immunity, is the fact that two members of the Supreme Court went out of their way to let us know just how eager they were to rule in the offending officer's favor.

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In the view of Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito, the officer in this case was fully entitled to receive qualified immunity and to be shielded from facing civil suit. If it were up to Thomas and Alito, the 6th Circuit's judgment against the officer would have been summarily reversed.

I am sometimes asked which members of the Supreme Court are the most reliably libertarian on various legal matters, such as criminal justice. After clarifying that nobody on the current Supreme Court is a truly consistent legal libertarian on anything, I typically say something to the effect that Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Neil Gorsuch usually tend to give libertarians the most reasons to cheer on matters of criminal justice.

This case presents us with the flip side of that coin. When viewed from a libertarian legal perspective, Thomas and Alito tend to stand out as the worst on criminal justice issues. In far too many cases, Thomas and Alito have exhibited a kind of overriding deference to law enforcement that undermines the Bill of Rights and thwarts government accountability. Their actions this week continue that unfortunate trend.

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NEXT: Stop Giving Property Tax Breaks to Senior Citizens

Damon Root is a senior editor at Reason and the author of A Glorious Liberty: Frederick Douglass and the Fight for an Antislavery Constitution (Potomac Books). His next book, Emancipation War: The Fall of Slavery and the Coming of the Thirteenth Amendment (Potomac Books), will be published in June 2026.

Supreme CourtQualified ImmunityCivil LibertiesConstitutionLaw & GovernmentPolicePolice AbuseLaw enforcementCourtsClarence ThomasSamuel AlitoCriminal Justice
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  1. Liberty_Belle   48 minutes ago

    Thomas and Alito Take a Regrettable Position in a Qualified Immunity Case

    Also in today's news ... the sun is shining.

    Log in to Reply
    1. JFree   22 minutes ago

      I'm sure they didn't regret the money they were paid to take that regrettable position.

      Log in to Reply
  2. MWAocdoc   41 minutes ago

    If we could poll the Founders concerning their biggest disappointment as to how the Constitution fared over the succeeding centuries, we would have great difficulty in getting an answer since they are certainly spinning in their graves quite rapidly at this point in history. Nevertheless, they clearly anticipated that the Executive power would be most in need of check by the other two branches; and they new without a shadow of a doubt the self-limitations large committees place upon themselves. Their biggest disappointment would surely be the track record of the Supreme Court.

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  3. Chuck P. (Now with less Sarc more snark)   30 minutes ago

    Pick a better case to make your point. Having to deal with assholes who distract police from the violent offenders during riots is exactly the kind of situation that qualified immunity was established to address.

    You can be libertarian and still recognize that dipshit protesters shouldn't get to interfere with police and then sue for the response they invited.

    Let me know when they voice support for QI for a cop that shoots at a friendly dog at a children's birthday party and hits a kid. I will join you in criticizing that case.

    Log in to Reply
    1. Rick James   23 minutes ago

      Or a teacher that transes your kid...

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    2. Murray Rothtard   23 minutes ago

      yeah! we citizens should only have rights SOMETIMES. and definitely never in intense or stressful times.

      Log in to Reply
      1. Chuck P. (Now with less Sarc more snark)   16 minutes ago

        Fuck off, Rethtard. You defy a lawful order to disperse at your own risk. THAT is a libertarian viewpoint.

        Log in to Reply
        1. Murray Rothtard   7 minutes ago

          you entire initial concept is completely backwards for any actual lover of liberty.

          in order for us all to have rights and freedoms, we must defend the rights of the most despicable, least sympathetic among us.

          when we defend the rights of the KKK to hold a parade, it ensures that we will all be able to have parades. That's what being an actual libertarian means. there's actually a lot less licking of boots than you seem prepared for.

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    3. MWAocdoc   20 minutes ago

      The facts of the case are irrelevant to the Constitutional principles the Supreme Court is supposed to uphold. Implicit in your complaint here is the assumption that police should never be interfered with. "They were just doing their job" is reminiscent of "I was just following orders" so look in the mirror: you should pick a better example to support your "back the blue" obsession.

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  4. Rick James   24 minutes ago

    Qualified immunity is a judge-made doctrine that routinely shields bad cops from facing civil lawsuits over their abusive and unconstitutional behavior.

    It does not. It's a judge-made doctrine that shields all public officials from facing civil lawsuits over their abusive and unconstitutional behavior.

    If you don't have the most basic and fundamental understanding of what Qualified Immunity actually does, you're never going to get anywhere trying to reform it.

    Log in to Reply
    1. Murray Rothtard   20 minutes ago

      this was a shit load of words to verify that everything the author wrote was factually correct.

      "Purina is a dog food brand that many owners routinely use to feed their golden retrievers."

      Rick James: "No way!! Purina is actually a food you can feed to ALL DOG BREEDS. if you don't have the most basic and fundamental understanding of what dog food is, you're never gonna feed any dogs"

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      1. Rick James   11 minutes ago

        Do you ever stop and wonder why "eliminating qualified immunity" will never get any traction? Hmm

        *thinks*

        *cue harp music and wavy screen wipe*

        For education groups, the debate is a bit delicate. Most have issued statements recommitting their support for racial equality after the death of Floyd, but likely would be reluctant to have the protections of qualified immunity stripped from their members.

        Several education groups contacted by Education Week to discuss qualified immunity, including AASA, the School Superintendents Association, and the National School Boards Association, declined an interview request on the topic, and others did not respond.

        “Qualified immunity is inherently a balancing act,” said Thomas Hutton, the interim executive director of the Education Law Association, a group for professors who teach school law as well as lawyers and some K-12 educators

        Hutton, a former staff lawyer for the NSBA and a former state charter school official in Hawaii, said care would need to be taken in eliminating or scaling back qualified immunity for educators.

        “It’s good to have a healthy discussion of where to strike the balance” between protecting individual rights and shielding officials from personal liability, he said. “But if you are going to suggest that public servants can be sued personally when they’re just trying to do their jobs and where the law is debatable even among lawyers and judges, that bodes ill for how we provide government services.”

        So if progressives are against removing qualified immunity, one wonders how much commitment there really is to removing it...

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        1. Rick James   8 minutes ago

          In a case involving a school administrator, a federal appeals court ruled in February that a California principal was entitled to qualified immunity against allegations by an undocumented immigrant mother that the principal threatened to call immigration authorities if the mother complained again about the school’s lunch policy

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        2. Murray Rothtard   4 minutes ago

          ooooohhhh. this shit is actually really good. why didn't you lead with this?

          having the teacher's unions all against it makes the concept even more delicious to me! fuck em all.

          Log in to Reply
  5. But SkyNet is a Private Company   22 minutes ago

    Qualified Immunity should NOT be abolished , lest we face a hellscape of gadflies clogging the courts with frivolous complaints harassing government employees personally every time they get a parking ticket, or think their water meter was read wrong, or their favorite rose bush was stepped on by the mailman, or don't like how the bus driver spoke to their bratty kid.

    No one will do the basic tasks of government if they are sued constantly and have to pay for their own lawyer, nothing will get done if they have to spend half their time in court.

    Instead, it needs a simple reform- overturn whatever idiotic precedent was set that says the facts of a case half to be identical to a prior case where a government official was successfully sued for clearly violating someone's rights. That's all, that's it.
    You don't throw the baby out with the bath water.

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    1. Rick James   18 minutes ago

      None of it matters, because in the absence of the QI doctrine, every district would merely indemnify their public officials against individual lawsuit. Which is exactly what we saw in the states that "reformed qualified immunity" that Reason celebrated and then got quiet about.

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  6. minus the clever name   7 minutes ago

    If Mr Root had said this in Court he'd have faced disciplinary action from the Bench !!!! It is not true that qualified immunity is admission of abusive and unconstitutional behavior !!! Shocking to hear such legal nonsense.

    Log in to Reply
  7. ungulant   7 minutes ago

    What's with all the bootlickers in the comments? I'm surprised so many "Libertarians" are rushing to defend cops shooting protestors.

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