Los Angeles Times

Trial is allowed in boy’s shooting

Supreme Court clears the way for Sonoma deputy to be tried in fatal pellet-gun case.

- By David G. Savage david.savage@latimes.com Twitter: DavidGSava­ge

The Supreme Court clears the way for parents to sue a Sonoma deputy.

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Monday allowed parents to press ahead with a lawsuit against a Sonoma County sheriff’s deputy who shot and killed their 13-year-old son as he walked on a sidewalk carrying a plastic pellet gun.

The justices without comment or dissent denied the county’s appeal seeking immunity for the officer. The court’s decision clears the way for the parents’ wrongful-death suit to go before a jury.

In recent years, the high court has repeatedly shielded law enforcemen­t officers from similar lawsuits alleging excessive force by extending a rule adopted in the 1980s that gave government officials “qualified immunity” from being sued over constituti­onal violations unless they did something that the court already had clearly defined as illegal and unconstitu­tional.

That standard has proved to be almost insurmount­able for many victims of excessive police force. Legal scholars and the libertaria­n Cato Institute have argued that neither the Constituti­on nor federal law gives the high court this freewheeli­ng authority to grant immunity, and they have urged the justices to scale back use of the doctrine.

Until Monday’s order in Gelhaus vs. Lopez, most of the time the justices have sided with police.

In April, the court by a 7-2 vote tossed out a lawsuit against an officer who shot a woman in Tucson as she was standing in her yard holding a large knife at her side. The officer came on the scene with two other officers and immediatel­y decided the knife-wielding woman posed a threat to another woman who stood six feet away. The other woman later testified she lived with the shooting victim and did not feel threatened. But in Kisela vs. Hughes, the justices reversed the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals and ruled the shooting victim could not sue because no previous case “squarely governed” the situation.

Three years ago, the justices tossed out an excessive force lawsuit against two San Francisco officers who twice forced their way into the living quarters of a woman who had a mental disability. They shot her when she raised a kitchen knife. The justices by a 6-2 vote reversed the 9th Circuit and ruled, in San Francisco vs. Sheehan, that the officers were entitled to immunity.

Last year, the 9th Circuit cleared the way for the parents of Andy Lopez to sue Deputy Erick Gelhaus. Lawyers for Sonoma County had appealed and cited the ruling in the Arizona case as grounds for granting immunity to the officer. They were joined by several California law enforcemen­t groups, including the California State Sheriffs’ Assn.

Monday’s brief order turning down the appeal has the effect of affirming the 9th Circuit and allowing the suit to go before a jury.

The shooting of Andy Lopez on an October afternoon on a sidewalk in Santa Rosa sparked protests and rallies five years ago. The 5foot-3 boy was seen carrying a plastic gun that Gelhaus, an Iraq war vet, thought might be an AK-47.

He and another deputy were on patrol when they spotted the boy and pulled their car behind him. Gelhaus jumped from the car, crouched behind the door and shouted: “Drop the gun.” As Andy turned toward him, Gelhaus fired eight shots and killed him.

No charges were brought against the deputy, but the boy’s parents sued him, alleging an excessive use of force and a violation of the 4th Amendment’s ban on “unreasonab­le seizures.”

A federal judge in Oakland refused to grant immunity to Gelhaus. The 9th Circuit upheld that decision last year in a 2-1 decision.

Judge Milan D. Smith said the officer did not appear to face danger or an immediate threat to himself or others. “Andy was walking normally … in broad daylight in a residentia­l neighborho­od,” and did not display “aggressive behavior,” the judge wrote. Moreover, the deputy “deployed deadly force while Andy was on the sidewalk holding a gun that was pointed down at the ground,” and “without having warned [him] that such force would be used,” he said.

In a pretrial hearing, Gelhaus had testified that he thought the boy’s gun was being raised when Gelhaus fired. In dissent, Judge Clifford Wallace of the 9th Circuit said the suit should have been dismissed because the officer “reasonably believed that Andy was carrying an AK-47.”

Noah Blechman, an attorney for Sonoma County, said he was “very disappoint­ed in the outcome. The county will explore all options to move this case to a final resolution.”

 ?? Conner Jay Press Democrat ?? SUJEY LOPEZ clutches the coffin holding the remains of her 13-year-old son Andy Lopez as her husband, Rodrigo Lopez, consoles her during a funeral at Resurrecti­on Parish in Santa Rosa on Oct. 29, 2013.
Conner Jay Press Democrat SUJEY LOPEZ clutches the coffin holding the remains of her 13-year-old son Andy Lopez as her husband, Rodrigo Lopez, consoles her during a funeral at Resurrecti­on Parish in Santa Rosa on Oct. 29, 2013.
 ?? Justin Sullivan Getty Images ?? A PICTURE of Andy Lopez sits among candles and gifts at a memorial on Oct. 29, 2013, in Santa Rosa.
Justin Sullivan Getty Images A PICTURE of Andy Lopez sits among candles and gifts at a memorial on Oct. 29, 2013, in Santa Rosa.
 ?? John Burgess Press Democrat ?? SANTA ROSA police Lt. Lance Badger holds a real AK-47, left, and a replica Airsoft pellet gun in 2013.
John Burgess Press Democrat SANTA ROSA police Lt. Lance Badger holds a real AK-47, left, and a replica Airsoft pellet gun in 2013.

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