Author Topic: Supreme Court sides with police in pair of 'qualified immunity' cases  (Read 349 times)

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Supreme Court sides with police in pair of 'qualified immunity' cases
By John Kruzel - 10/18/21 11:41 AM EDT


The Supreme Court on Monday sided with law enforcement in a pair of cases that implicated “qualified immunity,” the controversial legal doctrine that gives police broad protection from lawsuits.

In a pair of unsigned summary rulings issued without noted dissent, the justices reversed two federal appeals courts that had permitted excessive force lawsuits to proceed against officers in separate cases arising from California and Oklahoma.

The justices ruled the officers should be granted qualified immunity, which shields government officials from liability unless it is proven they violated a “clearly established” right, a difficult legal hurdle. 


Both lawsuits dealt with police responses to an emergency 911 call.

The California case involved a man wielding a chainsaw who had threatened his girlfriend and her two minor children, forcing them to barricade themselves inside a room, according to the 911 call.

more
https://thehill.com/regulation/court-battles/577190-supreme-court-sides-with-police-in-pair-of-qualified-immunity-cases
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Offline libertybele

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Re: Supreme Court sides with police in pair of 'qualified immunity' cases
« Reply #1 on: October 18, 2021, 05:50:10 pm »
Supreme Court sides with police in pair of 'qualified immunity' cases
By John Kruzel - 10/18/21 11:41 AM EDT


The Supreme Court on Monday sided with law enforcement in a pair of cases that implicated “qualified immunity,” the controversial legal doctrine that gives police broad protection from lawsuits.

In a pair of unsigned summary rulings issued without noted dissent, the justices reversed two federal appeals courts that had permitted excessive force lawsuits to proceed against officers in separate cases arising from California and Oklahoma.

The justices ruled the officers should be granted qualified immunity, which shields government officials from liability unless it is proven they violated a “clearly established” right, a difficult legal hurdle. 


Both lawsuits dealt with police responses to an emergency 911 call.

The California case involved a man wielding a chainsaw who had threatened his girlfriend and her two minor children, forcing them to barricade themselves inside a room, according to the 911 call.

more
https://thehill.com/regulation/court-battles/577190-supreme-court-sides-with-police-in-pair-of-qualified-immunity-cases

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Offline Kamaji

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Re: Supreme Court sides with police in pair of 'qualified immunity' cases
« Reply #2 on: October 18, 2021, 06:32:56 pm »
Pretty easy cases; it says something about the Ninth Circuit, and the Tenth (and nothing good about either, btw), that these cases had to go to the Supreme Court to reach the correct result.