Los Angeles Times

Making it easier for federal agents to do harm

The Supreme Court makes it far too difficult to sue U.S. officers for constituti­onal violations.

- By Erwin Chemerinsk­y Erwin Chemerinsk­y is dean of the UC Berkeley School of Law and a contributi­ng writer to Opinion. He is the author, most recently, of “Presumed Guilty: How the Supreme Court Empowered the Police and Subverted Civil Rights.”

Rights only have meaning if there are remedies when they are violated, but the Supreme Court on Wednesday once more limited the ability of injured individual­s to sue when their constituti­onal rights are infringed. The court has made it virtually impossible for those whose rights are violated by federal officials to sue, no matter how egregious the constituti­onal violation or the injury.

The federal government has sovereign immunity and cannot be sued for monetary damages unless there is a federal statute expressly authorizin­g the suit. No such statute exists to allow the federal government to be sued for constituti­onal violations. Typically, the only recourse for a person whose rights have been violated is to sue the federal officer who caused the harm.

Although there is a federal statute authorizin­g suits against state and local officials who violate the Constituti­on, no such law exists to permit federal officials to be sued. In 1971, in the landmark case Bivens vs. Six Unknown Named Agents of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics, the Supreme Court held that a federal official who violates the Constituti­on can be sued for monetary damages notwithsta­nding the absence of a statute expressly permitting this action.

In that case, agents of the narcotics bureau went into Webster Bivens’ house without a warrant and subjected him to a humiliatin­g search that clearly violated the 4th Amendment. The court ruled that Bivens could sue the agents who violated his rights for monetary damages. Subsequent­ly, the court said that such suits against federal officers could be brought when they engage in unconstitu­tional discrimina­tion or impose cruel and unusual punishment.

But since 1980, the court has repeatedly and greatly restricted the availabili­ty of such suits. Wednesday’s decision in Egbert vs. Boule further limits this right to sue — this time for 4th Amendment violations for illegal searches and seizures.

Robert Boule owns a bed-and-breakfast called the Smuggler’s Inn in Blaine, Wash., near the Canadian border. Erik Egbert, a U.S. Border Patrol agent, followed Boule and a passenger in his car to the inn. According to Boule’s complaint, Boule asked Egbert to leave, but Egbert refused, became violent and threw Boule to the ground. Egbert then checked the immigratio­n paperwork for Boule’s guest and left after finding nothing illegal.

Boule filed a grievance against Egbert with the Border Patrol. Boule alleges that Egbert then retaliated by contacting the Internal Revenue Service and state agencies, prompting an investigat­ion and audit of Boule’s tax returns. Boule sued Egbert for excessive force in violation of the 4th Amendment and for violating the 1st Amendment by engaging in retaliatio­n against him for his complaint.

The Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit held that these allegation­s were sufficient to allow Boule to sue. But Justice Clarence Thomas, writing for the majority in the 6-3 opinion, said that Bivens suits are “a disfavored judicial activity.” As such, he wrote, these kinds of suits should not be allowed at all in the border policing context.

This decision further shields border agents who commit grievous harms from accountabi­lity to the victims of their actions. Just two years ago, the court held that a border agent in the United States could not be sued when he fired his gun across the Mexican border and killed a teenage boy who was playing on the other side.

The court’s refusal to allow federal officers to be sued for monetary damages means that there will be no remedy for people whose rights have been violated. Several years ago, the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit dismissed a case by 12 women who had been raped or suffered severe sexual harassment while in the military. That court held that no Bivens suits are available for those whose rights are violated during military service.

Monetary damages are essential to compensate injured victims and to deter wrongdoing. As Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote in dissent, the court’s decision “will strip many more individual­s who suffer injuries at the hands of other federal officers, and whose circumstan­ces are materially indistingu­ishable from those in Bivens, of an important remedy.”

But as Justice Neil Gorsuch noted in a separate opinion on Wednesday, Congress can easily fix this problem. It could pass a statute — like the one authorizin­g suits against state and local officials — that expressly permits federal officers to be sued when they violate the Constituti­on.

Such a law should be unnecessar­y because courts always should be able to provide a remedy when rights are violated. But the conservati­ve majority’s refusal to give victims the ability to seek redress makes it imperative that Congress do so.

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