Task force considers changes to qualified immunity for Illinois law
enforcement officers
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[October 09, 2021]
By JERRY NOWICKI
Capitol News Illinois
jnowicki@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – A new state task force
continued discussions Thursday as to what changes could be made to the
way state law approaches qualified immunity for law enforcement
officers.
Qualified immunity is a court doctrine granting protection for law
enforcement officers and other government officials from certain civil
lawsuits seeking monetary damages for civil rights violations that
occurred during the course of their regular duties.
Courts have ruled that unless a plaintiff can prove the officer has
violated a “clearly established” right – meaning a court has ruled on a
case that’s almost exactly similar to the one it is considering –
qualified immunity can be used as a defense to shield the officer from
civil liability.
The Illinois Constitutional Rights and Remedies Task Force was created
under the SAFE-T Act, a criminal justice reform omnibus bill that became
law earlier this year. It met virtually Thursday in its second of four
meetings.
Scholars seeking to end qualified immunity told the task force reforms
are necessary to ensure that all individuals who believe they’ve had
their rights violated by police officers have the opportunity to seek
justice in court.
But police group representatives painted qualified immunity as a
little-used defense that’s been “blown out of proportion” and
“manipulated in the press.” Ending qualified immunity, the law
enforcement-affiliated panelists said, would make it more difficult to
retain police officers by making them live in fear of frivolous civil
lawsuits. It could also increase financial pressures on municipal
budgets by increasing litigation and insurance rates.
Both sides agreed that cases dismissed on qualified immunity grounds are
a “relatively small” fraction of the overall cases focusing on rights
violations by officers.
Larry James, a partner at the Crabbe, Brown & James law firm in
Columbus, Ohio, and general counsel for the National Fraternal Order of
Police, noted qualified immunity doesn’t protect against termination or
discipline for officers, but protects against only civil suits. It
protects officers who had to make “split-second” discretionary decisions
based on training they received and the limited information available.
He also said the Supreme Court, which has largely affirmed qualified
immunity as a defense, denied two cases of qualified immunity in recent
months.
“They said where it is so egregious, that it is obvious that these
officers have violated someone's civil rights, they're not going to
grant qualified immunity,” James said. “What you're seeing around the
country in these egregious cases, the officer is terminated, the
officer’s indicted, and, of late, you're seeing convictions and you're
seeing officers do time.”
If an officer is fired by a department and criminally indicted, he said,
“the government is not going to afford him or her any defense
whatsoever.”
“So qualified immunity is not going to even come into play,” he said.
John Murphey, with the firm Odelson, Sterk, Murphey, Frazier, McGrath,
Ltd., frequently represents cities and police departments. He said one
of the most important components of the SAFE-T Act is the accelerated
requirement of adoption of body cameras, which will “resolve a great
deal of the litigation.”
“But qualified immunity in the excessive force context is important too,
because officers typically are reacting,” he said. “They don't know for
the most part what is behind that door, they don't know what's in the
front seat of that car, or what's in that glovebox. So these are truly
split-second decisions that police officers have to make.”
Larry Rogers, a Cook County Board of Review commissioner and attorney at
Power Rogers LLP, said, “the real issue is protecting individual civil
rights,” and qualified immunity creates circumstances where officers
“don’t feel they’re going to be held accountable.”
Joanna Schwartz, a UCLA law professor who has published reports on the
subject, said the main problem with qualified immunity is that cases
dismissed on the precedent “are cases that could not be dismissed on any
other grounds.”
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Credit: Morguefile.com
“They are cases where there has already been proof of
a constitutional violation. And the reason that they've been
dismissed is because there happens to not be a prior similar enough
incident of unconstitutional plaintiffs,” she said.
She said arguments that municipalities will be
bankrupted and officers will leave the field if qualified immunity
is repealed are overstated. That’s because in the vast majority of
cases officers are indemnified by state law, meaning municipalities
pay civil penalties, and her research showed “lawsuits in police
misconduct cases amount to well less than 1 percent of most cities’
and counties’ budgets.”
“It would mean that for the relatively small percentage of cases
where people have shown constitutional violations, but there happens
to not be a prior case on point, those people would be able to get
justice through the courts,” she said of ending qualified immunity.
William Baude, a professor at the University of Chicago Law School,
said he was previously a clerk with Chief Justice John Roberts, and
he views qualified immunity as “problematic” based on constitutional
concerns.
He said one of the country’s “fundamental principles of the rule of
law” is that a person whose rights have been violated should have
the opportunity to remedy the situation. One of the most important
remedies is being able to bring the issue before a judge and jury.
Fred Smith, a professor at Emory University School of Law in
Atlanta, said qualified immunity creates distrust in the rule of
law.
“When people don't view the law as fair, they're less likely to
comply with the law,” he said. “So that is to say that it actually
kind of it creates its own public safety problem.”
Baude said while qualified immunity is a federal court doctrine, the
Supreme Court has, to some extent, left it in place because it is
“counting on the democratic deliberations to investigate what the
doctrine should be.”
The scholars agreed that any changes at the state level would
largely affect state courts as opposed to federal precedent.
When asked for potential changes to the state’s approach to
qualified immunity, Schwartz said it should either be eliminated or
made an “affirmative defense” for the officer, and Smith and Baude
agreed.
“If there is concern about eliminating qualified immunity entirely,
then make it an affirmative defense where the defendant really has
to come forward and show the policy, the training or the law that
they relied upon, that they were trained about, that they received,
that made them think that what they were doing was constitutional,”
she said.
Lance LoRusso, a lawyer and law enforcement officer who has trained
officers in more than 30 states, for federal agencies and in nine
countries, suggested task force members take part in use-of-force
decision-making and scenario-based trainings that law enforcement
officers must take.
“If you could see the absolute decision making that has to take
place in a compressed time space,” he said, “you would understand
why the courts created a concept of qualified immunity for
discretionary acts.”
The task force will next meet on Oct. 21, and task force members
requested staff prepare a review of how many cases have been
dismissed under qualified immunity in Illinois in recent years and
how many misconduct cases have been filed.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan
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Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.
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