Las Vegas Review-Journal

The Supreme Court and police accountabi­lity

- JACOB SULLUM Jacob Sullum is a senior editor at Reason magazine. Follow him on Twitter: @Jacobsullu­m.

ON a sunny Friday afternoon in July 2014, James King, a 21-year-old college student, was walking to a summer job in Grand Rapids, Michigan, when he was accosted by two unshaven men wearing jeans and baseball caps who asked his name and grabbed his wallet. When King tried to flee, the men tackled him, choked him unconsciou­s and punched him in the face over and over again.

The men, it turned out, were cops, and for six years King has been trying to hold them accountabl­e for their actions that day. On Monday the U.S. Supreme Court will consider whether he should get that chance.

The assailants, FBI agent Douglas Brownback and Grand Rapids detective Todd Allen, were looking for a 26-year-old man named Aaron Davison, who allegedly had stolen liquor and empty soda cans from his former employer’s apartment. They had a driver’s license photo of Davison, which looked nothing like King.

Brownback and Allen, who were members of a state-federal fugitive task force, neverthele­ss claimed they reasonably believed King was Davison, based on the suspect’s general descriptio­n and the fact that King was in the same neighborho­od where Davison had a habit of buying soda. They also said they identified themselves as police officers, which seems highly doubtful given King’s reaction.

Because a Grand Rapids officer ordered witnesses to delete their cellphone recordings of the beating (ostensibly “for the safety” of “undercover officers”), we have no video of the struggle. But witness accounts suggest that Allen — who choked King and, after the panicked college student responded by biting his arm, hit him in the face and head “as hard as I could, as fast as I could, and as many times as I could” — was out of control. “They were pounding his head for no reason,” a bystander says in a cellphone recording. “They’re gonna kill this man,” a 911 caller said.

King’s first stop after this harrowing encounter was the hospital; his next stop was jail. He was charged with three felonies for assaulting Brownback and Allen, but a jury acquitted him.

After a federal judge dismissed the lawsuit that King filed in response to the incident, the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals last year ruled that he could pursue his constituti­onal claims against Brownback and Allen. It said a jury could reasonably conclude that the cops violated the Fourth Amendment by detaining King without reasonable suspicion, taking his wallet, preventing him from leaving and using excessive force.

In its appeal to the Supreme Court, the U.S. government argues that

King should never get his day in court because part of his lawsuit — claims against the United States under the Federal Tort Claims Act — was dismissed for lack of jurisdicti­on. King’s lawyers, joined by members of Congress, civil liberties groups and several FTCA experts, argue that the government’s reading of that statute contradict­s its plain language and intent.

According to the government, a law aimed at providing victims of official abuse with additional remedies leaves King worse off than he would have been if it had never been passed: He not only cannot use that statute; he has no recourse at all.

“These officers did something that was illegal and then charged me,” King says. “The system closed around them and helped them get away with that. There is zero accountabi­lity.”

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