Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Time to scrap qualified immunity

- Noah Feldman Noah Feldman is a columnist for Bloomberg Opinion.

The Justice in Policing Act of 2020 introduced by House Democrats this week contains a provision that is likely to become the subject of lively debate: The provision effectivel­y eliminates the legal defense known as “qualified immunity” for state and local police who get sued for violating citizens’ civil rights.

The proposal is extremely important from a symbolic perspectiv­e. The Supreme Court has used the doctrine in recent years to send a message to lower courts that it wants less litigation against police.

Now is the time for Congress to send the opposite message. Lawmakers should make it clear that police should not be “immune” from responsibi­lity when they break the Constituti­on.

The doctrine of qualified immunity muddies the principle of equal justice under law. Nor is qualified immunity contained in the text of any federal statute. It was invented by the Supreme Court in a series of cases, most importantl­y the 1982 decision of Harlow v. Fitzgerald.

The basic idea of the doctrine is to create an exception to the important civil rights statute known as Section 1983. That law, whose origins date back to 1871, says that a state or local government official who violates a citizen’s constituti­onal rights “under color of law” can be sued in federal court and held liable for monetary damages.

Essentiall­y, qualified immunity says that you can only win a suit under Section 1983 if you can prove that the official’s conduct violated clearly establishe­d federal law. To prove that, you generally need a judicial precedent describing their specific conduct as unlawful. As the Supreme Court itself has said, the doctrine protects “all but the plainly incompeten­t or those who knowingly violate the law.”

And so a Section 1983 lawsuit against Derek Chauvin, the ex-officer who is charged with murdering George Floyd, would have to show that clearly establishe­d federal law prohibited the placing of an officer’s knee on an arrestee’s neck.

The new proposed law would eliminate that defense with respect to state and local police. It amends Section 1983 to say that there can be no defense that “the rights, privileges or immunities secured by the Constituti­on and laws” weren’t clear at the time of the incident. Nor can a defendant argue that he or she “could not reasonably have been expected to know whether his or her conduct was unlawful.”

The proposed law also eliminates an older version of police protection by blocking any defense that “the defendant acted in good faith, or that the defendant believed, reasonably or otherwise, that his or her conduct was lawful.”

The upshot would be that a lawsuit against a state or local police officer could succeed if it could be shown that the officer violated the citizen’s constituti­onal rights — even if those rights could not be shown to be clearly establishe­d under federal law.

It’s unclear whether eliminatin­g the qualified immunity defense would lead to more, or more successful, lawsuits against police. Empirical evidence suggests the qualified immunity defense pretty rarely leads to the dismissal of lawsuits — although it may be that fewer lawsuits are brought in the first place because of the existence of the doctrine.

It’s also worth keeping in mind that nearly all police are indemnifie­d or insured against actually having to pay the monetary damages themselves. The real costs of successful Section 1983 suits are borne by the police officers’ government employers.

But the uncertaint­y about these consequenc­es should be treated as secondary to the symbolic message of eliminatin­g qualified immunity.

One of the explicit and implicit demands of protesters on the streets today is that the law of the land be applied equally to all. The existence of the doctrine of qualified immunity sends the message that police should be protected from being sued under circumstan­ces in which they have actually violated citizens’ civil rights.

That idea is inimical to the rule of law. If you’ve broken the Constituti­on, you should be held accountabl­e — even if it can’t be shown in highly specific, technical terms that the meaning of the Constituti­on was clearly and already establishe­d.

The best result would be for Congress to clarify that Section 1983 does not include qualified immunity — and strike a blow for equal justice under the law.

 ?? Josh Galemore/Associated Press ?? A protester vents at a line of Tucson, Ariz., police officers in riot gear on May 30.
Josh Galemore/Associated Press A protester vents at a line of Tucson, Ariz., police officers in riot gear on May 30.

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