Why Is It So Hard for Victims of Police Abuse To Get Justice?
Joanna Schwartz on how law enforcement "became untouchable"
HD DownloadOnree Norris was nearly 80 years old when, on the evening of February 8, 2018, he heard an explosion go off inside his house in suburban Georgia. A team of more than two dozen police officers had set off stun grenades. They careened through every door of his home with battering rams. The cops thrust Norris—who suffered from bad knees and a heart condition—to the ground. They arrested him and took him out of his house in handcuffs.
The officers were doing a drug raid—but they had the wrong house. The actual suspect, according to the warrant, lived in an off-white house with a black roof; Norris' house was yellow with a gray roof. And he didn't resemble the man police were after, who was less than half Norris' age.
When Norris sued, his lawsuit was thrown out because of qualified immunity, a legal doctrine that makes it difficult for victims to get recourse when government officials violate their constitutional rights.
Qualified immunity was first created by the Supreme Court in 1967. The Court then strengthened it in 1982, when the justices ruled that a victim cannot bring a suit against a state or local government actor unless nearly identical misconduct has been ruled unconstitutional in a prior court decision. It's the same reason that two police officers in Fresno, California, could not be sued after they allegedly stole over $225,000 during the execution of a search warrant. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit ruled that those officers did not have "clear notice" that stealing under those circumstances was unlawful, because no court precedent addressed that question.
"I think you could compare it to…a person bringing a lawsuit that they've slipped and fallen in a grocery store…and the court says, 'Have you been able to find a prior court case in which someone slipped and fell on orange juice in the produce aisle?'" says Joanna Schwartz, a law professor at UCLA and author of the recent book Shielded: How the Police Became Untouchable. "Because if it was water in the dairy section, that's not enough."
Qualified immunity is supposed to ensure that government employees have proper warning of what conduct violates the Constitution. But government officials can still receive qualified immunity even when they violate their own training. In effect, it assumes that police officers are reading case law in their spare time.
"We as a society, whether we like it or not, are providing these officers with their power, their discretion, their badges, and their guns," says Schwartz. "And I believe that we as a society also have a responsibility, a shared responsibility, to make those people whole when their rights have been violated under our authority and to try to prevent something from happening again in the future."
To underscore how difficult it is for victims of police abuse to get recourse, Schwartz writes about Tony Timpa, a man who died during an arrest in Dallas in 2016. When Timpa's mother, Vicki, received word from police that her son was no longer alive, the government gave her multiple different stories about what had happened to him, none of which implicated the Dallas Police Department. But then she went to the morgue and saw something strange: There was grass in his nose.
It turns out the cops had intervened during a mental health crisis Timpa experienced one evening in August 2016. Officers kneeled on his back for about 14 minutes in violation of department policy, and he subsequently suffered "sudden cardiac death due to the toxic effects of cocaine and [the] physiologic stress associated with physical restraint," according to an autopsy. After Timpa became unresponsive, Officer Dustin Dillard, who was promoted last year, teased that he heard Timpa "snoring," prompting Cpl. Raymond Dominguez and Officer Danny Vasquez to wise-crack that Timpa was a schoolboy who just needed some "tutti-frutti waffles" and "scrambled eggs" to be enticed out of bed.
But Vicki Timpa didn't know what happened, because the police wouldn't tell her. They refused to turn over the body camera footage, which she needed to state what's called a "plausible" claim—the bare minimum standard to file a federal lawsuit. If she couldn't get more information on what happened that night, then her suit would be dead on arrival, before a judge could even evaluate whether those officers would get qualified immunity.
"The idea about this plausible pleading standard is to give defendants notice of what is being alleged against them," notes Schwartz. "Well, the Dallas Police Department had all the notice in the world about what their officers had done, and yet used this tool to try to get the case dismissed."
Vicki went through a lengthy legal battle which finally forced the police to turn over the footage in August 2019, three years after her son's death. Only then did she have enough facts to write that plausible claim. Afterward, those Dallas officers received qualified immunity—which was ultimately overturned on an appeal. The Supreme Court confirmed in 2022 that Timpa's family could finally sue the police.
But it took almost six years for Vicki Timpa to get there. "The Supreme Court and state and local governments across the country have created barriers to relief in these cases at every level of the litigation process," says Schwartz.
Justice Clarence Thomas has critiqued qualified immunity as an example of legislating from the bench, while Justice Sonia Sotomayor has said it allows police to "shoot first and think later." Some maintain it's necessary, however, to protect relatively low-paid public employees who can't be too afraid to make mistakes.
"The idea that's been commonly stated—that officers are going to be bankrupted for split-second mistakes without qualified immunity—bears no relationship to reality, because officers are virtually always indemnified by policy or law, meaning the employer pays for those settlements," adds Schwartz. "And…the Fourth Amendment protects against those split-second mistakes. So they don't have those things to be worried about."
Overcoming qualified immunity doesn't mean you've won your case; it gives you the right to take your claim to trial and ask a jury to determine if damages are deserved. Attorneys who work on such cases receive compensation on a contingency basis, which means they only get paid if they win, another factor that protects against frivolous suits clogging the courts.
While the doctrine applies to state and local actors, federal cops receive an even more robust set of protections and are shielded by what essentially amounts to absolute immunity.
Take the 2016 case of a then-70-year-old retired cop named Jose Oliva, who arrived for a dental appointment at a Veterans Affairs hospital in El Paso, Texas. According to surveillance footage, federal officers placed him in a chokehold, unprovoked, and violently contorted Oliva's hand behind his back, damaging his shoulder and requiring he receive two surgeries.
Yet Oliva was prohibited from suing because those officers were acting at neither the state nor local level.
These sorts of abuses have put police under intense scrutiny over the last several years. But Schwartz concedes that law enforcement conduct has improved in recent decades. One indication of that: Fatal police shootings are down nationwide. In New York City, for example, officers shot and killed an average of 62 people a year from 1970–74. That declined to nine fatal shootings a year from 2015–21, according to data compiled by Peter Moskos, a professor at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice.
"It may be that people's rights are violated less frequently now than 10 or 20 years ago…. But it remains true also that our systems for holding police accountable in those circumstances in which they violate the law and people's rights really fails to offer justice to a meaningful percentage of those people," says Schwartz. "This is the moment to look at all the information and design a better future."
Photo Credits: Eric Lee/UPI/Newscom: Hydetim, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Rod Lamkey / CNP / SplashNews/Newscom; imageSPACE/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom; imageSPACE/ImageSpace/Sipa USA/Newscom; Gage Skidmore from Peoria, AZ, United States of America, CC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Julius Schorzman (Quasipalm), CC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Gage Skidmore from Peoria, AZ, United States of America, CC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons; Spenser H spensewithans, CC0, via Wikimedia Commons; Rod Lamkey / CNP / SplashNews/Newscom; Lorie Shaull, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons.
Music Credits: "Wet Sand," by Oran Loafer via Artlist; "Underwater," by Orian Rose via Artlist; "Dive Into the Abyss," by Aquators via Artlist; "Belly Button Whistles," by Randy Sharp via Artlist.
- Video Editor: Regan Taylor
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Gangs in the Ecuadoran city of Guayaquil are fighting for control of the drug trade. The violence is being fueled by... prohibition, of all things. Prohibition entrenches cop criminality, wrecks the economy, prevents education, creates Hoovervilles.
Tony Timpa disproves White Privilege
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In that case, Amir Locke proves police are racist.
Some maintain it's necessary, however, to protect relatively low-paid public employees who can't be too afraid to make mistakes.
Public employees are no longer "relatively low-paid."
And in any case lots of other low-paid people get sued. And why shouldn't they be afraid of violating people's rights? The whole point of the Republic was supposedly that people be afraid to do that.
Relative to the President, congresscritters, governors, etc...
There should be a bright line between willful police abuse and honest mistakes by law enforcement officers. Any police officer who doesn’t know that lying on an affidavit in order to get a no-knock search warrant is illegal and unconstitutional doesn’t deserve immunity or even to remain in the position of law enforcement officer. It’s possible to get the wrong address for an otherwise legitimate search or arrest warrant, but if they damage an innocent person’s property or the person herself, the victim should not even NEED to sue to recover costs from the government! The city, county, state or feds should be so embarrassed at their mistake that they automatically offer compensation and an apology, not to mention disciplinary re-education for their employees.
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The city, county, state or feds should be so embarrassed at their mistake that they automatically offer compensation and an apology, not to mention disciplinary re-education for their employees.
On the rare instances where the indemnifier pays out, the settlements always contain a clause where the government does not admit to guilt or wrongdoing.
Power means never ever admitting to being wrong, and embarrassment requires shame.
Go buy some self awareness you goddamn freak.
Power is also the time derivative of capacity to kill en masse.
The problem is that the determination of whether the behavior was willful abuse or an honest mistake is what requires the trial. Until you hold the trial, you can't know which side of the line the case is on.
The whole point of QI is to stop the process before it gets to that point. Courts clearly understand that "the process is the punishment" when it's police being put through the process even though they consistently deny that reality with respect to the rest of us.
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You're right that the citizen harmed by a mistake like that shouldn't have to do anything, much less file a lawsuit, to be made whole, but the issue goes even deeper.
A no-knock raid is essentially a military action taken against a citizen. I'm not going to go all out and hold that such actions should be outright prohibited, but in order to prevent them from being abused, they need to be conducted under the *opposite* of qualified immunity--if anything goes wrong, the case proceeds against the government officials *as if they planned it that way*.
In other words, if you aren't 100% sure that you've got the right address, don't even dream of conducting a paramilitary operation.
Interesting idea, but how the hell is THAT gonna get rid of blacks, hippies, fereigners and jyooz? Inquiring Republicans and Southern Dems want to know! There is also the issue of cui bono (what's in it for me?). How is that gonna enrich corrupt cops and DAs? The whole point of prohibition is to quadruple profit, organize the crime so cops can infiltrate, loot, control and convert it into a giant industry until the income tax boys take out the entire economy getting THEIR tentacles into the game!
"Mistake..." (GRIN). --Cap'n, we have a search warrant for one of our wealthiest sources of pelf, payola and purchasing power. Whut'll we do?
--Bust the house across the street, kill the dog, some civvies. That'll alert our client that the heat is on. Qualified immunity'll make all bad outcomes go away. Count on it!
*ctrl-f union 0/0*
really fails to offer justice to a meaningful percentage of those people So are we talking .00000000001 or .000000002 or .99999% Why would anyone believe there is a problem when it seems all you have it anecdotes?
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There's no mystery at LIBtranslator. Dirty cops and renegade agents benefit from substance prohibition. Basically: ban, thus quadupling prices. Transfer that to cops-DAs via looting and forfeiture, add immunity to grow into banking mega-corporation controlling entire governments, then send in tax thugs to grab, slash and burn until population is in hovels picking through garbage. Rinse and repeat. Quod Erat Demonstratum, this applies to every major Crash.
Why Is It So Hard for Victims of Police Abuse To Get Justice?
Because criminals have tried to use the claims of abuse, when none happened, to avoid consequences for their actions.
So many phony claims has created a system where the default is to initially not believe the charge.
That makes it harder to get over the hurdle of it being a legitimate claim, which almost always comes down to one's word against the other.
That doesn't address the QI issue - which is not about whether a claim is legit but about whether you can even get to the point of making the claim. When a defendant files a motion to dismiss owing to QI, the courts don't spend time looking at the validity of the plaintiff's claim - they basically assume that the facts are as claimed, and then rule whether on those facts, QI applies. Only when they say it doesn't is the case returned to a court of first instance for trial.
If that were the case then cops would have begged to be issued with bodycams, they did not. Instead they insisted on protection that acts no matter how justified the charge. They wanted to be able to abuse and not be sued.
QI isn't the biggest problem, which is that cops who commit crimes on the job are quite unlikely to be prosecuted for those crimes. The only people who can prosecute them under our current system of criminal law are prosecutors that work closely with the cops in every case they take, so if the cops are doing wrong, the prosecutor is essentially a co-conspirator.
Ah. Suddenly a light glimmers to reflect on how intellectuals of the looter persuasion became so pasionately enamored of "conspiracy theory" as an all-purpose rebuttal dismissing any and all thought that looters-by-law could possibly collaborate on anything unseemly. The same looters who put "conspiracy" at the top of tens of thousands of indictments are able to dismiss in one and the same word any peep suggesting it might apply to *them* as well. THAT is reality control on hard currency!
@markm23. Its true that police and prosecutors go hand in hand which protect police against prosecution. But in South Texas all public officials can rely on other public officials, especially the DA, to pull off spectacular feats of corruption protected by the DA, Judges, and "legal error". The solution is obvious. If your part of the system, enjoy it. If not, don't bother using it since self-help is much more effective.
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You ran for Congress. Uh-huh, right.
You can't fight city hall is as old as the first city. The real problem is the police's awards are covered by the city, which means the taxpayer foot the bills. Make it so each individual policeman is responsible for his own abuse or the leaders that planned an executed the botched raids, and you would see a difference.
We have local city and county then state government that are all corrupt as the federal government. Ask how those such as Biden live in D.C. for 50 years and is worth according to Forbes is $8 million and Obama who never worked a day in his life either is worth $70 million. Police make around $100,00 a year and get every benefit you can imagine then retire with pay after 25 years and keep every benefit along with lifetime concealed carry and what many do not know is police have machine guns. The city in which I live the PD has over 400 M16s. Colorado State Patrol can bring their own to work or tax payers buy him one. If a cop violates your Rights and you survive it your recourse is a courtroom. You cannot afford it. You likely will lose and police have a word they use about court appearances: "I have to go testi-lie today".
Why plea bargains? Courts do not want citizens hearing about what is going on. Juries have power but everyone wants to avoid jury duty.
Those recently born will grow seeing police as they are now and think it has always been that way just as the older ones never knew life before zillow priced every house in the country destroying the free market system.