Special Report: For cops who kill, special Supreme Court protection
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[May 08, 2020]
By Andrew Chung, Lawrence Hurley, Jackie Botts, Andrea Januta and
Guillermo Gomez
MADILL, Oklahoma (Reuters) - Sick with
pneumonia, agitated and confused, Johnny Leija refused to return to his
hospital room.
Moments later, with three police officers pinning him on the floor,
Leija was dead at age 34.
Staff at the local hospital in tiny Madill, Oklahoma, had called the
police in the early evening of March 24, 2011, for help giving Leija an
injection to calm him. Security cameras captured much of the ensuing
encounter.
The officers, after shooting Leija with a stun gun, follow him down a
corridor, shock him again, and wrestle him to the floor. One officer
then straddles Leija’s back, trying to handcuff him as the others
struggle to pull back his arms. They get one handcuff on. Leija goes
limp. The officers step back. Hospital staff drop to Leija’s side and
begin a futile effort to resuscitate him.
The Oklahoma Chief Medical Examiner’s Office determined that Leija, his
lungs already compromised by pneumonia, was starved for oxygen in his
struggle with the police and died from “respiratory insufficiency.”
The county sheriff and the Madill police chief defended the officers’
actions as appropriate to the situation. The cops were not charged with
any wrongdoing.
Erma Aldaba, however, blamed the officers for her son’s death. “My son
wasn’t a criminal, my son was sick,” she said in an interview.
So Aldaba took the only other route open to people in her situation: She
sued. Her lawsuit in federal district court in Muskogee, Oklahoma,
alleged that the three officers used excessive force, violating her
son’s civil rights under the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution,
which protects against unreasonable search and seizure.
But almost immediately, her case hit a formidable obstacle: a
little-known legal doctrine called qualified immunity. This 50-year-old
creation of the U.S. Supreme Court is meant to protect government
employees from frivolous litigation. In recent years, however, it has
become a highly effective shield in thousands of lawsuits seeking to
hold cops accountable when they are accused of using excessive force.
At first, it looked like Aldaba would clear the hurdle. The judge
hearing her case, and then a federal appeals court, rejected the
officers’ claim of qualified immunity.
The appeals panel based its decision on a two-question test courts use
to weigh police requests for immunity. The first is whether the evidence
shows or could convince a jury that the officers used excessive force in
violation of the Fourth Amendment. The second question is whether the
officers should have known they were breaking “clearly established” law
– a Supreme Court coinage for a court precedent that had already found
similar police actions to have been illegal.
To both questions, the court determined, the answer was yes.
Then, at the officers’ request, the Supreme Court intervened. The
justices ordered the appeals court to reconsider its ruling, indicating
that they disagreed with the lower court.
Back at the appeals court, Aldaba’s lawyer argued, as he had the first
time around, that the cops’ treatment of Leija was “clearly established”
as illegal. To support his argument, he cited earlier cases in which
police were held liable for using excessive force on unarmed, mentally
compromised people. Not similar enough, the court now said, so the cops
had no reason to think they were breaking the law. The police got
immunity. Aldaba’s case was dead.
“It makes me feel that there was a mistake, but we can’t win,” Aldaba,
60, said. “We can’t win fighting the cops.”
EFFECTIVE BARRIER
Aldaba’s lament has become an increasingly common one. Even as the
proliferation of police body cameras and bystander cellphone video has
turned a national spotlight on extreme police tactics, qualified
immunity, under the careful stewardship of the Supreme Court, is making
it easier for officers to kill or injure civilians with impunity.
The Supreme Court’s role is evident in how the federal appeals courts,
which take their cue from the high court, treat qualified immunity. In
an unprecedented analysis of appellate court records, Reuters found that
since 2005, the courts have shown an increasing tendency to grant
immunity in excessive force cases – rulings that the district courts
below them must follow. The trend has accelerated in recent years. It is
even more pronounced in cases like Leija’s – when civilians were unarmed
in their encounters with police, and when courts concluded that the
facts could convince a jury that police actually did use excessive
force.
Reuters found among the cases it analyzed more than three dozen in which
qualified immunity protected officers whose actions had been deemed
unlawful. Outside of Dallas, Texas, five officers fired 17 shots at a
bicyclist who was 100 yards away, killing him, in a case of mistaken
identity. In Heber City, Utah, an officer threw to the ground an unarmed
man he had pulled over for a cracked windshield, leaving the man with
brain damage. In Prince George's County, Maryland, an officer shot a man
in a mental health crisis who was stabbing himself and trying to slit
his own throat.
The increasing frequency of such cases has prompted a growing chorus of
criticism from lawyers, legal scholars, civil rights groups, politicians
and even judges that qualified immunity, as applied, is unjust. Spanning
the political spectrum, this broad coalition says the doctrine has
become a nearly failsafe tool to let police brutality go unpunished and
deny victims their constitutional rights.
The high court has indicated it is aware of the mounting criticism of
its treatment of qualified immunity. After letting multiple appeals
backed by the doctrine’s critics pile up, the justices are scheduled to
discuss privately as soon as May 15 which, if any, of 11 such cases they
could hear later this year.
Justice Sonia Sotomayor, one of the court’s most liberal members, and
Clarence Thomas, its most conservative, have in recent opinions sharply
criticized qualified immunity and the court’s role in expanding it.
In a dissent to a 2018 ruling, Sotomayor, joined by fellow liberal
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, wrote that the majority’s decision favoring
the cops tells police that “they can shoot first and think later, and it
tells the public that palpably unreasonable conduct will go unpunished.”
In that case, Kisela v. Hughes, the justices threw out a lower court’s
ruling that denied immunity to a Tucson, Arizona, cop who shot a
mentally ill woman four times as she walked down her driveway while
holding a large kitchen knife.
A year earlier, Sotomayor in another dissent called out her fellow
justices for a “disturbing trend” of favoring police. “We have not
hesitated to summarily reverse courts for wrongly denying officers the
protection of qualified immunity,” Sotomayor wrote, citing several
recent rulings. “But we rarely intervene where courts wrongly afford
officers the benefit of qualified immunity.”
Sotomayor was responding to the majority’s decision not to hear an
appeal brought by Ricardo Salazar-Limon, who was unarmed when a Houston
police officer shot him in the back, leaving him paralyzed. A lower
court had granted the officer immunity.
The Reuters analysis supports Sotomayor's assertion that the Supreme
Court has built qualified immunity into an often insurmountable police
defense by intervening in cases mostly to favor the police. Over the
past 15 years, the high court took up 12 appeals of qualified immunity
decisions from police, but only three from plaintiffs, even though
plaintiffs asked the court to review nearly as many cases as police did.
The court’s acceptance rate for police appeals seeking immunity was
three times its average acceptance rate for all appeals. For plaintiffs’
appeals, the acceptance rate was slightly below the court’s average.
In the cases it accepts, the court nearly always decides in favor of
police. The high court has also put its thumb on the scale by repeatedly
tweaking the process. It has allowed police to request immunity before
all evidence has been presented. And if police are denied immunity, they
can appeal immediately – an option unavailable to most other litigants,
who typically must wait until after a final judgment to appeal.
“You get the impression that the officers are always supposed to win and
the plaintiffs are supposed to lose,” University of Chicago law
professor William Baude said. In his research, Baude has found that
qualified immunity, as a doctrine, enjoys what he calls “privileged
status” on the Supreme Court, which extends to cases the court decides
without even hearing arguments – a relatively rare occurrence. In such
cases, the court disproportionately reversed lower courts’ denials of
immunity.
All nine current justices declined to be interviewed for this article.
They have offered few explanations of the court’s stance on qualified
immunity beyond writing in opinions that the doctrine balances
individuals’ rights with the need to free officials from the
time-consuming and costly burden of unnecessary litigation.
DEFINING 'CLEARLY ESTABLISHED'
The main challenge for plaintiffs in excessive force cases is to show
that police behavior violated a “clearly established” precedent. The
Supreme Court has continually reinforced a narrow definition of “clearly
established,” requiring lower courts to accept as precedent only cases
that have detailed circumstances very similar to the case they are
weighing.
“We have repeatedly told courts not to define clearly established law at
a high level of generality,” the court wrote in a November 2015 opinion,
repeating its language from an earlier ruling. In that 2015 opinion, the
justices reversed a lower court decision and granted immunity to Texas
State Trooper Chadrin Mullenix, who had stopped a high-speed chase by
shooting at a vehicle from an overpass, killing the driver.
Critics of qualified immunity say the high court’s guidance has created
a ludicrously narrow standard. Even some judges feel constrained. In a
2018 decision, James Browning, a judge in federal district court in New
Mexico, said he was ruling “with reluctance” in favor of an officer who
had slammed an unarmed man to the floor in his own home while he was
yelling at the police.
The force the cop used, Browning ruled, was excessive. But the officer
had to be granted immunity, he said, because of subtle differences with
the earlier case Browning had considered as a possible “clearly
established” precedent. Those differences included the distance between
the men and the officers and what the men were yelling. Even the
locations of the respective incidents could be a factor, the judge
noted, the earlier case having occurred in a Target parking lot.
In his ruling, Browning criticized the high court’s approach because “a
court can almost always manufacture a factual distinction” between the
case it is reviewing and an earlier case.
In February, the federal appeals court in Cincinnati, Ohio, granted
immunity to an officer who shot and wounded a 14-year-old boy in the
shoulder after the boy dropped a BB gun and raised his hands. The court
rejected as a precedent a 2011 case in which an officer shot and killed
a man as he began lowering a shotgun. The difference between the
incidents was too great, the court determined, because the boy had first
drawn the BB gun from his waistband before dropping it.
In other recent cases, courts have sided with police because of the
difference between subduing a woman for walking away from an officer,
and subduing a woman for refusing to end a phone call; between shooting
at a dog and instead hitting a child, and shooting at a truck and
hitting a passenger; and between unleashing a police dog to bite a
motionless suspect in a bushy ravine, and unleashing a police dog to
bite a compliant suspect in a canal in the woods.
The Supreme Court in 2009 raised the bar even higher for plaintiffs to
overcome qualified immunity. In Pearson v. Callahan, it gave judges the
option to simply ignore the question of whether a cop used excessive
force and instead focus solely on whether the conduct was clearly
established as unlawful.
In the decade since then, the Reuters analysis found, appeals courts
have increasingly ignored the question of excessive force. In such
cases, when the court declines to establish whether police used
excessive force in violation of the Fourth Amendment, it avoids setting
a clearly established precedent for future cases, even for the most
egregious acts of police violence. In effect, the same conduct can
repeatedly go unpunished.
The case of Khari Illidge shows this perverse dynamic at work.
One cool spring evening in 2013, sheriff’s deputies in Phenix City,
Alabama, a suburb of Columbus, Georgia, responded to a trespassing call.
They found Illidge wandering along a quiet, tree-lined road. The
25-year-old was naked, covered in scratches and behaving erratically.
In the encounter, the deputies shocked Illidge six times with a stun gun
before he fell to the ground. As he lay face-down, one deputy shocked
him 13 more times as two others struggled to handcuff his wrists,
according to their testimony. They then shackled his ankles with leg
irons and fastened them to his handcuffs – an extreme form of restraint,
known as a hogtie, that many police departments across the country have
banned.
A 385-pound officer then kneeled on Illidge’s upper back until he went
limp. Illidge was pronounced dead on arrival at the hospital. The
autopsy report lists cardiac arrest as the cause of death.
“They treated him like an animal,” Gladis Callwood, Illidge’s mother,
said. “Or maybe even worse.”
Callwood sued the police, alleging excessive force. The cops claimed
qualified immunity. They said they did what was necessary to subdue an
aggressive man who resisted arrest and who, according to a friend who
had seen him earlier, had probably taken LSD. A toxicology report found
no traces of the drug in his blood.
“You have to make split-second decisions,” Ray Smith, one of the
deputies who had shocked and hogtied Illidge, told Reuters. Hesitation
can be deadly, he said.
Judge W. Harold Albritton in federal district court in Montgomery,
Alabama, sided with the cops. In his ruling, the judge said there was no
precedent establishing that the officers’ treatment of Illidge was
unlawful.
The Atlanta-based 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals agreed – even
though it had heard a case involving hogtying in Florida in 2009. In
that earlier case, Donald George Lewis died after West Palm Beach cops
hogtied him on the side of the road where they had found him disoriented
and stumbling through traffic. But the appeals court in that earlier
case granted immunity without addressing whether the force police used
was excessive. As a result, the court didn’t establish a precedent that
could apply in subsequent cases – including Callwood’s.
By allowing judges to consider only the question of clearly established
law in excessive force cases, the Supreme Court created a closed loop in
which “the case law gets frozen,” said lawyer Matt Farmer, who
represented Lewis’s family.
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Erma Aldaba sits in her home, wearing a T-shirt emblazoned with the
image of her son Johnny Leija, who died in hospital after a deadly
encounter with the police, in Madill, Oklahoma, U.S. April 11, 2019.
REUTERS/Andrew Chung
In October 2018, the Supreme Court declined to review Callwood’s
case. Her lawsuit, like Aldaba’s, was dead.
HIGH-PROFILE OUTLIERS
Police have difficult, high-risk jobs. Few would dispute that.
Qualified immunity is essential, proponents say, because police need
latitude to make split-second decisions in situations that could put
lives, including their own, at risk.
“It is very easy to second-guess the decision making of a police
officer when you are sitting at a desk,” said Chris Balch, an
Atlanta-based lawyer who represents police departments in civil
rights cases.
Larry James, general counsel of the National Fraternal Order of
Police, said the trend in appeals courts to favor immunity reflects
the high volume of meritless lawsuits civil rights lawyers file.
“Plaintiffs’ lawyers sue everyone under the sun, irrespective of the
facts,” he said.
Even so, as the Reuters analysis found, appellate courts have ruled
in favor of plaintiffs, denying cops immunity, in 43 percent of
cases in recent years. As opponents of qualified immunity point out,
denial of immunity doesn’t automatically mean cops will be held
liable for alleged excessive force. When such cases go to trial,
juries may side with police after weighing the facts of a case.
Also, local governments or their insurers, not the cops themselves,
typically bear the financial burden of litigation, settlements or
jury awards.
The U.S. government does not maintain comprehensive data on
civilians killed or seriously injured by police. According to media
organizations and police-accountability groups that compile numbers
from police reports, news accounts and other sources, the number of
deaths alone is about 1,000 a year.
A handful of those incidents draw national attention to police
tactics – for example, the 2014 death of Eric Garner after New York
City police put him in a lethal chokehold. In such high-profile
cases, qualified immunity rarely comes into play. Instead, police
departments, often under heavy political pressure and facing public
protests, typically offer big dollar settlements to victims or their
survivors. The cops may also face disciplinary action or criminal
charges.
In the far more numerous incidents of alleged excessive force that
don’t make national headlines, police departments are under less
pressure to settle, and officers are even less likely to be
prosecuted or otherwise disciplined. In those cases, federal civil
rights lawsuits provide the obvious avenue for holding cops
accountable.
The United States first allowed citizens to sue government officials
for civil rights violations in a law passed in 1871. These so-called
Section 1983 lawsuits were intended to give citizens a path to
justice when state and local authorities in the post-Civil War era
turned a blind eye to – or even participated in – acts of racist
violence by groups like the Ku Klux Klan.
Nearly a century later, the Supreme Court introduced qualified
immunity, articulating the doctrine in a 1967 ruling to limit
Section 1983 lawsuits. The court reasoned that police should not
face liability for enforcing the law in good faith. The court
refined the doctrine in 1982 to include the “clearly established”
test.
Today, after decades of Supreme Court tweaks to how excessive force
cases are judged, plaintiffs’ lawyers say the deck is unfairly
stacked against their clients. “Why are there so many police
shootings?” said Dale Galipo, a prominent California civil rights
attorney. “I would say one of the reasons is there’s no
accountability, there’s no deterrent.”
Several lawyers told Reuters they decline to take cases they think
may have merit in large part due to the high barrier of qualified
immunity. “I have turned down dozens of police misconduct cases and
have routinely referred the potential plaintiffs to qualified
immunity as a major problem,” said Victor Glasberg, a civil rights
lawyer in Virginia.
The American Association for Justice, the plaintiff bar’s main
lobbying group and a backer of efforts to curb qualified immunity,
knows that its “members would like to pursue cases where people are
treated unjustly,” said Jeffrey White, the group’s senior associate
general counsel. But, he added, lawyers must think carefully when
“the chances of obtaining justice are tilted heavily towards
defendants.”
GENTLE AND LOYAL
Johnny Leija spent his life in small towns in the dry, flat farming
and oil country on both sides of the Oklahoma-Texas border, quitting
school after junior high to take a series of temporary construction
jobs.
He was gentle and fiercely loyal to his family, friends and
relatives told Reuters. They recounted the time Leija ended up with
a broken leg after sticking up for his sister in a fight with her
abusive boyfriend. In his early 20s, he spent a year in Marshall
County jail for marijuana possession. After that, his family said,
he never indulged in anything harder than the occasional Bud Light.
Leija moved to Madill in early 2011 with his girlfriend, Olivia
Flores, and the four children they were raising – one of their own
and three by Flores from an earlier relationship. He soon got a job
welding and painting horse trailers, but money was tight. Leija,
Flores and the children were sleeping on the floor of their
still-unfurnished house. In late March, when Leija started
complaining about pain in his chest and torso, Flores had to pawn a
radio to buy medicine.
On the morning of March 24, 2011, after Leija spent most of the
night vomiting, he and Flores headed to the emergency room at
Integris Marshall County Medical Center, now called AllianceHealth
Madill. Details of what happened over the next 12 hours come from a
review of hundreds of pages of medical, police and court records and
interviews with people involved.
When first examined, Leija was agreeable and alert, but his blood
oxygen levels were dangerously low. He was put on oxygen and given
antibiotics through an intravenous line. He soon seemed on the mend
and was admitted to a room down the hall.
Flores left midafternoon to pick up the children from school. Soon
after, Leija’s breathing became labored. His blood-oxygen level
plunged again. He became distressed and aggressive. The doctor on
call, John Conley, prescribed over the phone an anti-anxiety pill.
Leija refused it, claiming that the hospital staff was trying to
poison him. “I am Superman,” he yelled. “I am God!”
He somehow cut the IV line and told a nurse that he needed to leave.
Conley, again by phone, told nurses to give Leija an injection to
calm him. The hospital had no security staff, so a nurse called the
police to help restrain Leija for the shot. Conley arrived minutes
later, finding Leija in the bathroom still insisting he had to leave
the hospital.
Madill Police Officer Brandon Pickens and Marshall County Deputy
Sheriffs Steve Atnip and Steve Beebe were eating dinner at La
Grande, a Tex-Mex joint on a highway north of Madill, when they got
the call about an unruly patient at the hospital.
They had little information when they arrived. Beebe thought Leija,
dressed in a white T-shirt and pajama bottoms, was a visitor, not a
patient.
According to the officers’ accounts, Leija pulled the gauze from his
IV site and yelled, “This is my blood!” as it dripped on the floor.
The officers ordered Leija to his knees. He did not comply. Beebe
aimed his Stinger stun gun at Leija and fired, hitting Leija in the
chest.
It had little effect. Leija “hollered out, shook a bit,” a nurse
later testified. Beebe, Pickens and Atnip then grabbed Leija, 5 foot
8 and 230 pounds, and pushed him against a wall, where Beebe pressed
the Stinger against Leija’s back and shocked him again. The four
toppled onto the lobby floor with a thud.
Pickens and Atnip were holding Leija face down and Beebe was trying
to handcuff him when he grunted and stopped moving. Clear fluid
poured from his mouth and pooled on the floor around his head.
Conley and staff spent 40 minutes trying to revive Leija. At 7:29
p.m., he was pronounced dead, a Stinger dart still stuck in his
chest.
Marc Harrison, a forensic pathologist with the Oklahoma Chief
Medical Examiner’s Office, testified in a sworn deposition that
Leija’s manner of death was “natural,” but that “it would be
reasonable to assume” that two shocks with a stun gun and Leija’s
physical struggle with police would have “required an elevated need
for oxygen.” Through the medical examiner’s office, Harrison said he
stands by his opinion.
STERN DENIALS
When Aldaba’s lawsuit against the officers landed in federal court
in Muskogee, Oklahoma, the officers’ lawyers quickly asked that the
case be thrown out on the grounds of qualified immunity.
It was “abundantly clear” that the force used on Leija was not
excessive, the police lawyers argued. Further, they said, no
established precedent put the officers on notice that they would
violate Leija’s rights “by attempting to subdue an individual so
that medical staff could properly treat him.”
Judge Frank Seay disagreed. He noted that officers’ accounts
differed from each other about the extent of the threat Leija posed
and what the officers knew about his medical condition. For
instance, the two sheriff deputies said Leija was “slinging blood”
and had challenged them to fight, but officer Pickens did not make
those claims. And while all three officers said Leija was bleeding
heavily, two nurses present testified that he wasn’t.
“Leija was a hospital patient. He was not armed in any fashion.
While it is alleged that he was using his blood as a weapon, there
is no evidence that any blood spattered on any of the officers,”
Seay said in his April 5, 2013, ruling. The case against the three
officers could now move forward.
Beebe, the deputy who twice shocked Leija, said in an interview that
his biggest regret about the fatal encounter was not having more
details on Leija and his medical condition. “Maybe we could have
done things different if we had that information,” Beebe said. “The
last thing you want to do is end up with somebody dying.” He added:
“I’m sad for the family. We all live in the same community.”
Beebe also serves as pastor at a Southern Baptist church in a nearby
town – a role that he said has helped him understand the need to
de-escalate stressful situations.
In the encounter with Leija, however, he and the other officers “did
the right thing” to protect themselves and the people in the
hospital, he said. “I think we need to be held accountable,” Beebe
said. “But when we go out, sometimes we have to use force…. We
shouldn’t have to worry about being sued every time.”
Pickens, now a firefighter in Madill, directed questions to his
police superiors. City Manager James Fullingim, who was police chief
at the time of Leija’s death, said immunity is important for
officers to perform their jobs. “The officers absolutely did not do
anything wrong,” he said.
Atnip died in a motorcycle accident in 2015. Conley, the doctor who
treated Leija, declined to comment.
The police took their case to the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
in Denver, Colorado. That court was no less stern in denying the
officers’ appeal, faulting their decision to “Tase and wrestle to
the ground a hospital patient whose mental disturbance was the
result of his serious and deteriorating medical condition.” Leija
did not commit any crime, the court said, and he posed a threat only
to himself, passively resisting the officers. “The situation the
police officers faced in this case called for conflict resolution
and de-escalation, not confrontation and Tasers,” the court said.
The officers then petitioned the Supreme Court to review the case.
Their appeal arrived just as the justices were weighing the case of
Texas State Trooper Mullenix, the cop who shot and killed a fleeing
driver from an overpass.
The lower courts had denied Mullenix immunity, saying it was unclear
how much of a risk the driver had posed. But on Nov. 9, 2015, the
Supreme Court reversed the lower courts. Ignoring whether the force
used was illegal, the justices focused on whether Mullenix’s actions
had been clearly established as illegal. It concluded that none of
the three car-chase cases it had previously decided were similar
enough.
The same day, the justices ordered the 10th Circuit to use the
Mullenix ruling as a guide in reconsidering whether qualified
immunity should apply in Aldaba’s case.
Aldaba’s lawyer, Jeremy Beaver, pointed out to the appellate panel a
handful of “strikingly similar” rulings from the 10th Circuit going
back nearly 20 years that provided “ample warning” to the police
that their actions were unlawful.
Case law since 2001, Beaver noted, required police to consider a
person’s diminished mental health or capacity when determining what
force to use. A 2007 case denounced the beating and Tasing of an
unarmed, nonviolent person who was not fleeing. So did a similar
case from 2010.
“Mr. Leija had a clearly established right to be free from Tasering
and tackling while he was a hospital patient who had committed no
crimes, was unarmed, was not a threat to the officers or the public,
and was mentally and physically compromised,” Beaver argued in court
papers.
That wasn’t enough. The revised appeals court decision, written by
Judge Gregory Phillips, dismissed Beaver’s arguments because the
“offered cases differ too much from this one.”
Phillips said the cases Beaver cited involved force to detain people
for “non-medical” reasons and did not involve hospital personnel
“standing by observing” the incident. “We have found no case
presenting a similar situation,” the judge wrote. Phillips did not
respond to a request for comment.
The outcome, Beaver said, highlights the painful paradox of
qualified immunity. Aldaba “had to live with the fact that at every
stage, every judge that reviewed the case determined that there were
constitutional violations that had occurred,” he said. “Despite
that, she still couldn’t have a trial.”
(Reporting by Andrew Chung in Madill, Oklahoma; Lawrence Hurley in
Washingont, D.C.; Jackie Botts in Los Angeles; and Andrea Januta and
Guillermo Gomez in New York. Edited by John Blanton and Janet
Roberts.)
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