U.S. Supreme Court Reaffirms U.S.
Police State:
The killer of George Floyd was
quietly backed by the U.S. Supreme Court on June 15th.
On June 15th, the U.S. Supreme Court,
with only the libertarian right-wing (basically anti-government) Clarence
Thomas dissenting — reaffirmed that America’s law-enforcement officers have
“qualified immunity” from prosecution when they do things such as to shoot an
innocent person in his own yard whose unthreatening pet dog is seeking his
protection from an officer who is trying to shoot it; or, as the libertarian
lawyer Jay Schweikert put this
matter: “the Supreme
Court let stand an Eleventh
Circuit decision granting
immunity to a police officer who shot a ten-year-old child in the back of the
knee, while repeatedly attempting to shoot a pet dog that wasn’t threatening
anyone.” The officer was Deputy Sheriff Michael Vickers, of Coffee County,
Georgia. He had been chasing a suspect, who happened to cross into the yard of
Amy Corbitt, who at that time happened to be chatting with another adult,
Damion Stewart. One of her children was referred to in the case as “SDC.” Here
is how the lower court
ruling stated the
incident:
At some point after Vickers and the
other officers entered Corbitt’s yard, the officers “demanded all persons in
the area, including the children, to get down on the ground.” An officer
handcuffed Stewart and
placed a gun at his back. … Then, “while the children were lying on the
ground obeying [Vickers’s] orders ... without necessity or any immediate threat
or cause, [Vickers] discharged his firearm at the family pet named ‘Bruce’
twice.” The first shot missed, and Bruce (a dog) temporarily retreated under
Corbitt’s home. No other efforts were made to restrain or subdue the dog, and
no one appeared threatened by him. Eight or ten seconds after Vickers fired the
first shot, the dog reappeared and was “approaching his owners,” when Vickers
fired a second shot at the dog. This shot also missed the dog, but the bullet
struck SDC in the back of his right knee. At the time of the shot, SDC was
“readily viewable” and resting “approximately eighteen inches from Vickers,
lying on the ground, face down, pursuant to the orders of [Vickers].” Barnett
(the fleeing suspect) “was visibly unarmed and readily compliant” with
officers. According to the complaint, “[a]t no time did SDC, or any other
children ... present any threat or danger to provoke ... Vickers to fire two
shots.” Importantly, the parties do not dispute that Vickers intended to shoot
the dog and not SDC. Corbitt, individually and as SDC’s parent and
guardian, brought a civil action against Vickers in his individual capacity
pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The complaint alleged deprivations of the right
to be free from excessive force as guaranteed by the Fourth and Fourteenth
Amendments to the United States Constitution. … In response,
Vickers filed a motion to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6). He asserted that
he was entitled to qualified immunity because case law had not staked out a
“bright line” indicating that the act of firing at the dog and unintentionally
shooting SDC was unlawful.
The U.S. Supreme Court ruled for
Deputy Sheriff Michael Vickers. The case against Vickers was one of many such,
throughout the country, and the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling dismissed all
of them for the same reason.
Here is how the Rutherford Institute, which backed all of these cases against
the officers, phrased the
officers’ argument in
one of these cases:
Qualified immunity shielded the
defendants’ actions from liability because Petitioner could not point to any
factually identical case clearly establishing that law enforcement officials
exceeded the scope of Petitioner’s consent to enter her home when they
essentially destroyed her home. That reasoning sets an impossible standard.
Because courts are free to advance to the 'clearly established' prong of the
qualified immunity inquiry without first deciding threshold constitutional
questions, it is unlikely that a body of case law with closely analogous
factual circumstances will ever develop.
In other words: the U.S. Supreme
Court ruled 8 to 1 that unless Congress will pass a new law which will
specifically apply the 4th and the 14th Amendments so as to enable prosecution
of law-enforcement officers who do the specific listed sorts of things that
unequivocally are identified in those new statutes as being prohibited under
those Amendments, America’s law-enforcement officers are free to continue doing
these sorts of things and to avoid any sort of legal liability for having done
them.
It’s impossible to know for sure what
motivated the Court to deny all of these petitions. But one possibility is that
the Justices were looking closely at developments in Congress — where members
of both the House and the Senate have introduced bills that would abolish
qualified immunity — and decided to duck the question, hoping to pressure
Congress to fix the Court’s mess. It is certainly encouraging that so many
legislators have finally turned their attention to qualified immunity. But the
mere fact that Congress can fix this mess doesn’t absolve the Supreme Court of
its obligation to fix what it broke — the Court conjured qualified immunity out
of nothing in the first place, and the Justices had both the authority and
responsibility to correct their own blunders, no matter what happens in the
legislature.
Qualified immunity will go down in
history as one of the Supreme Court’s most egregious, costly, and embarrassing
mistakes. None of the Justices on the Court today were responsible for creating
this doctrine, but they all had a responsibility to fix it — and except for
Justice Thomas, they all shirked that responsibility. It is now all the more
urgent that Congress move forward on this issue and ensure that all public
officials — especially members of law enforcement — are held accountable for
their misconduct.
However, Schweikert contradicts
himself there, because he simultaneously acknowledges that qualified immunity
was concocted by the Court and not imposed into the law by the Congress and
signed into the law by the President. So, there is disingenousness in
Schweikert’s proposed ‘solution’. An evil that was introduced
by the U.S. Supreme Court cannot
be eliminated by the U.S. Congress and a good President. Nor can it be
eliminated by successfully going through the lengthy and arduous process of
passing a new Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. No matter what types of
actions by law-enforcement officers would be specifically listed in any such
new law or new Constitutional Amendment, it would fail. An arbitrary, basically
evil, U.S. Supreme Court will
always be able to place its imprimatur upon and validate new rationalizations
for the police-state that they have been constructing in this country,
especially after 9/11. (This evil, however, was introduced by
the U.S. Supreme Court in 1967 and has been and remains virtually ignored by
the press though it protects police officers in the George Floyd case and all
other cases where police injure or kill people.) Congress and the President
can’t fix this, they can’t fix a problem that they didn’t themselves create,
but Congress and the President can condemn and shame the Court — which they
never do. Better yet, they can impeach all of the sitting ‘Justices’ and
replace them with decent people. But each of this Court’s members was placed
there by the Congresses, and by the Presidents. It’s an extremely vicious
circle, and no part of it can fix other parts of it.
This isn’t a failure ONLY by the U.S.
Supreme Court. It is instead an expression of the American system as it now
exists, and which failure renders the U.S. Constitution itself almost
meaningless, especially as regards the rights of the people and the obligations
of federal officials at all levels in the government. There is no
accountability; there is only blame. And, as in any authoritarian system, all
blame goes downward, and all praise goes upward. That’s the reality. The U.S.
Constitution is by now just a string of words. America’s Founders are dead,
gone, and no longer really even an influence. That’s the reality. Pretending
otherwise won’t fix anything. Drastic changes are needed. And the American
public has proven itself
not up to the challenge, still refuses to face the reality. This is system-failure. And the public refuses to
face it.
The corruption is beyond control, and the public
ends up paying for all of it. People such as Amy Corbitt and her son “SBC” are
mere collateral damages in such a system. The beneficiaries from the system run
the system. The least that the public can do is to call it a “dictatorship”
instead of a “democracy.” The most that the public can do is overthrow it and
replace it with one that has the same Constitution and none of the existing
case-law, and that adds a few Amendments, such as this. Also essential would be an entirely new and more
rigorous methodology for interpreting the Constitution. There is no existing
rigorous methodology for Constitutional interpretation. The present chaos in
that regard is virtually inviting the degeneration and predominant corruption
that currently exist. Especially after World War II, the U.S. Supreme Court has
increasingly taken advantage of that chaos.
Currently, the phrase “American
justice” is oxymoronic.
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