The Columbus Dispatch

Court took 9/11 ‘ factor’ too far

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In 1965, narcotics agents burst into the home of Webster Bivens without a warrant, manacled him in front of his family, threatened to arrest his wife and children and marched him off to the Brooklyn courthouse. Six years later, the lawsuit Bivens brought reached the Supreme Court, which ruled for the first time that agents of the federal government could be sued personally for damages if they violated a citizen’s constituti­onal rights, even if Congress hadn’t explicitly authorized such lawsuits.

That case, Bivens vs. Six Unknown Federal Narcotics Agents, might sound like a landmark decision, and so it seemed at the time. But over the years, the courts have found one excuse after another to ignore its central insight: that if there is a violation of the Constituti­on, there must also be a remedy.

The most recent example of judicial abdication is a federal appeals-court decision protecting a Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion employee who accused a traveler of making a bomb threat — a charge that a judge later found to be baseless — after the man complained about disrespect­ful treatment during a security screening.

An architect named Roger Vanderklok was preparing to fly from Philadelph­ia Internatio­nal Airport to Miami in 2013 to participat­e in a half-marathon. Because his carry-on luggage contained an electronic heart monitor enclosed in a plastic tube, Vanderklok was subjected to a secondary screening supervised by TSA employee Charles Kieser. According to Vanderklok, after he threatened to file a complaint against Kieser for disrespect­ful and aggressive behavior, the TSA employee called the police and claimed that Vanderklok had suggested that he could bring a bomb to the airport and “you would never find it.”

Vanderklok was arrested and charged with disorderly conduct, “threatenin­g the placement of a bomb” and “terroristi­c threats.” But he was acquitted when Kieser’s testimony was contradict­ed by surveillan­ce footage.

Vanderklok then sued Kieser for, among other things, violating his 1st Amendment rights by retaliatin­g against him for saying that he would file a complaint. But the U.S. 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals last week ruled that a First Amendment claim against a TSA employee couldn’t even be brought.

Writing for the threejudge panel, Judge Kent A. Jordan held that a “special factor” argues for protecting TSA employees from lawsuits. What is that “special factor”? Essentiall­y, it’s all about 9/11. Jordan argues that the court couldn’t consider Vanderklok’s claims without second-guessing “the government’s whole response to the Sept. 11 attacks, thus of necessity requiring an inquiry into sensitive issues of national security.”

Even if one shares that concern about a chilling effect on policymake­rs — and we think it is overstated — it’s absurd to discern a similar “special factor” in the mundane duties of TSA employees. Yet Jordan tries to make such a connection, saying that a “threat of damages liability could indeed increase the probabilit­y that a TSA agent would hesitate in making split-second decisions about suspicious passengers.”

If that’s going to be the court’s attitude, then Congress must act to ensure that when federal officials, high or low, violate the Constituti­on, those they harm can seek justice.

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