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A New GOP Bill Would Make It Virtually Impossible to Sue the Police


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2017 May 26, 4:19pm   1,796 views  5 comments

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Keeping with the Trump administration’s law-and-order rhetoric, Republicans in the House and Senate recently introduced a bill they’re calling the Back the Blue Act of 2017. The Senate bill was introduced by John Cornyn (R-Tex.), and is co-sponsored by 15 senators, all Republicans. The identical House bill was introduced by Ted Poe (R-Tex.), and includes five co-sponsors, also all Republicans. The bill would create new federal crimes, impose federal police over the will of local officials and voters and shield police officers from virtually any civil liability, even in cases of egregious misconduct.

While Republicans are fond of touting principles like federalism and local control over criminal-justice policy when it comes to, say, federal oversight of abusive police, this bill would let a Trump-appointed district attorney overrule local officials if he or she didn’t like the way they were handling a case involving an assault or killing of a cop. For example, a number of jurisdictions across the country have recently elected district attorneys who promise a more reform-oriented approach to law enforcement. In a few places, such as Philadelphia, Chicago and Houston, the new DAs were elected specifically after campaigning on policing issues, or in response to a past incumbent’s inattention to police abuse. If this bill passes, a U.S. attorney more sympathetic to law enforcement could thwart those efforts by, for example, charging a high-profile victim of police abuse with the new federal crime of assaulting a police officer. It wouldn’t be difficult. We’ve seen plenty of video now where a clear victim of police brutality was initially arrested and charged with battering one of the officers who beat him.

But perhaps the most disturbing part of the bill is the new restrictions it puts on suing police officers for constitutional violations. As we’ve discussed here several times before, it’s already extremely difficult to even get in front of a jury with a claim against law enforcement, much less win an award. Police officers are protected by qualified immunity, which requires you to show that not only were your rights violated but also a reasonable police officer should have known that the actions in question were a violation of the Constitution. Under this bill, even if you can show all of that, if the police can show that the violation and resulting injuries were “incurred in the course of, or as a result of, or . . . related to, conduct by the injured party that, more likely than not, constituted a felony or a crime of violence . . . (including any deprivation in the course of arrest or apprehension for, or the investigation, prosecution, or adjudication of, such an offense),” then the officers are liable only for out-of-pocket expenses. What’s more, the bill would bar plaintiffs from recovering attorneys fees in such cases.

This means that if the police raid your home with a search warrant for pot and shoot you dead, even if your family can show that the shooting was unlawful, the police would be liable only for something like funeral expenses if they could show that “more likely than not,” you had sold some pot, or at some point possessed a large enough quantity of the drug to merit a felony charge. In some jurisdictions, merely resisting arrest is a felony. In theory, this could mean that under a scenario in which the police falsely arrest you, you resist, and they then severely beat you, if they could show that the beating was the result of your resisting, not the false arrest, you could be barred from suing for anything other than the cost of treating your injuries. If the resisting charge could be filed as an assault, that’s already a felony in most jurisdictions, and even where it isn’t, under this bill it would become a federal felony.

Much More: http://www.americatalks.com/politics/a-new-gop-bill-would-make-it-virtually-impossible-to-sue-the-police/

#PoliceState #Politics #LawAndOrderRunAmuck

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1   Dan8267   2017 May 26, 9:00pm  

Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable. This bill sounds like a great way to motivate another person to start killing cops at random. Republicans never learn.

2   Ernie   2017 May 27, 12:44pm  

APOCALYPSEFUCK_is_ADORABLE says

Then the cops just start spraying whole neighborhoods from war surplus helicopters that require spare parts from their districts.

Gun-toting citizens will return fire.

From http://www.khou.com/news/crime/active-shooter-situation-reported-in-west-houston/220585167

From the link: HPD helicopter also had five bullet strikes.

3   Dan8267   2017 May 27, 12:46pm  

APOCALYPSEFUCK_is_ADORABLE says

Then the cops just start spraying whole neighborhoods from war surplus helicopters that require spare parts from their districts.

This movie has already been made. It's called The Purge trilogy.

4   HEY YOU   2017 May 27, 9:12pm  

Police & politicians need to remember they & their families live in a country with a boo coup of guns.
How many gun owners/neighbors will get pissed off and have enough?
The good part is that Democrats & Republicans might become collateral damage.

5   anonymous   2017 Oct 27, 7:37pm  

Americans are whistling down to the concentration camps.

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