Daily Archives: August 26, 2020

Elon Musk promises demo of a working Neuralink device on Friday – The Verge

Posted: August 26, 2020 at 4:08 pm

Elon Musk has said that his secretive neurotech firm Neuralink will demonstrate a working device, presumably a brain-machine interface, at 6PM ET on Friday. Musk has spoken repeatedly about his belief that BMI devices are needed to help humans keep up with AI by supplementing our brainpower, but right now, his goal is much simpler: to create an implantable device that lets people control phones or computers with their mind.

Musk initially announced the August 28th progress update back in July, and has now offered more details on what will be shown. He says the update will include the unveiling of a second-generation robot designed to attach the companys technology to the brain, and a demo of neurons firing in real-time, though its not clear exactly what is meant by this.

Even compared to Musks other ventures like Tesla and SpaceX, Neuralink is ambitious. The company wants to connect to the brain using flexible electrodes thinner than a human hair that it calls threads. Current BMI devices use stiff electrodes for this job, which can cause damage. But inserting flexible electrodes is a much more delicate and challenging task, hence the companys focus on building a sewing machine like robot to do the job.

Eventually, Neuralink hopes to make the installation process for BMIs as non-invasive as Lasik eye surgery, even removing the need to use general anesthetic. Musk has previously spoken about the need for an automated Lasik-like process for BMIs to overcome the constraints and costs involved with needing to use highly trained neural surgeons. But this isnt ready to be shown off yet, according to Musk. Still far from LASIK, but could get pretty close in a few years, Musk tweeted in response to a followup question about the event.

Many scientists have welcomed Musks involvement in this medical field, because of the huge potential of BMIs to help paralyzed individuals and those with neurological disorders. Others have cautioned that his claims for the future utility of these devices are far from proven, and his timescales for progress overly optimistic. Neuralink said last year it would start clinical trials by the end of 2020, but has not given any further updates on this goal.

Neuralink is yet to officially announce how youll be able to watch Fridays event, but keeping an eye on the companys YouTube channel seems like a safe bet.

Go here to read the rest:

Elon Musk promises demo of a working Neuralink device on Friday - The Verge

Posted in Elon Musk | Comments Off on Elon Musk promises demo of a working Neuralink device on Friday – The Verge

Prepare for the irreversible rise of non-profit activity everywhere – Livemint

Posted: at 4:06 pm

The last quarter century, which saw major economic crises every few years, should be seen more as a crash of the discipline of economics than anything else. The future we see around us tells us that global socio- political-economic realities have changed, but economists are still wringing their hands in despair over the impending demise of free trade and the rise of protectionist policies. But protectionism isnt a problem, it is a desperate remedy that accountable politicians have been eager to grasp, while unaccountable economic experts offer no better solution than the endless printing of money. Economists no longer seem to understand the complex realities engulfing us.

In a world where cheap capital-financed technology is adding more to gross domestic product (GDP) than almost any other factor of production, we have to internalize some observable truths: One, human skills will always be trumped by machines. This implies that jobs depend on making human skills compatible with what machines and computers already do much better. Two, skill demand will be extremely polarized, with high demand for super-skills, and low demand for middle skills, and reasonably high demand for easily learnable skills. This is the essence of our jobs crisis, and the solutions dont lie in lowering taxes or providing cheap money to zombie firms. Three, all the material things needed for human survival already exist in abundance. It is only their distribution that is the problem. Four, large parts of the real output of goods and services are moving into the non-monetizable part of the economy, and hence disappear from GDP. The proverbial homemaker economy, where real services are provided without showing up in GDP numbers, is now spreading beyond gender-based distribution of paid and unpaid work.

The last point can easily be demonstrated in the world of media, where there is an organized sector with an advertising-driven business model. But this model is under attack from millions of free" publications and blogs that individuals and non-profit micro-companies produce. According to one estimate, there are now more than 500 million blogs that produce more than two million posts daily. Very little of this free output is showing up in GDP. Most large media houses have also become partial non-profit organizations, as they make much of their money from activities beyond their core business.

These observed facts point us in one direction: that the new global economy will rapidly polarize between a market economy dominated by firms that produce goods and services efficiently, and a non-market economy that needs to exist so as to find work" and distribute incomes or goods and services, almost like non-governmental organizations (NGOs). The market economy is reliant on the expansion of non-state services financed by profits or wealth generated within. In the years ahead, we will probably see a dramatic expansion of the non-market economy, something that free-traders and globalizers dont seem to see as factors in their economic forecasts.

Today, many governments focus on make-work (like our rural employment guarantee scheme) and income-distribution schemes unrelated to work, from a universal basic income to cash payouts of the kind the Narendra Modi government is now making to farmers and female Jan Dhan account holders. Some of these are camouflaged as loans, which may soon go bad and need writeoffs and waivers. If we are asking corporates to compulsorily allot 2% of net profits to social activities, again this is a free income or services scheme. Zombie firms that exist only because of cheap liquidity are also non-profits kept alive for social and political reasons. The market economy may come to depend on the rapid expansion of such non-government and zombie firms.

This means non-profits will be crucial for social cohesion and harmony. As a corollary, governments need to make this sector more efficient and vibrant, and as deserving of deregulation as the mainstream corporate sector.

The number of non-profits is rising dramatically because of a huge unmet demand for public goods and services. A Central Bureau of Investigation survey in 2015 found there were more than 3.1 million registered NGOs. The current number could be around 3.5 million. We have one NGO for every 400 citizens. Most of them may be poorly run, with some even created for shady purposes like money-laundering and vote-buying. Since many NGOs exist only to achieve single goalspreventing pollution or saving wildlifetheir activities could get in the way of profitable economic processes. Despite the apparent legitimacy of anti-pollution concerns, the short-term outcomes can be economically negativeas the closure of a Sterlite plant in Tamil Nadu shows.

However, there is little doubt that the non-profit sector plays a huge role in the economy. It needs better regulation, enlightened leadership and greater professionalisation to deliver healthy social and economic outcomes when the market economy is failing to do its job. The NGO-ization of economies is irreversible. We should focus on making them more responsible and productive, and less obstructive.

R. Jagannathan is editorial director, Swarajya magazine

Subscribe to newsletters

* Enter a valid email

* Thank you for subscribing to our newsletter.

Read more:

Prepare for the irreversible rise of non-profit activity everywhere - Livemint

Posted in Basic Income Guarantee | Comments Off on Prepare for the irreversible rise of non-profit activity everywhere – Livemint

Five Things You Need to Know to Start Your Day – Bloomberg

Posted: at 4:06 pm

You can catch coronavirus twice and the illness's effects on patients and the economymay last years. Meanwhile U.S. stocks hit an all-time high on treatment hopes. And China's big banks are on a hiring spree. Here are some of the things people in markets are talking about today.

A man was infected with the coronavirus for a second time after recovering from an initial bout in April, in what scientists said was the first case showing that re-infection may occur within a few months.The 33-year-olds second infection was detected via airport screening on his return to Hong Kong from Europe this month. Among those who survive the illness, there isan expanding population of so-called long-haulers left with debilitating conditions long after "recovery." Its now known that SARS-CoV-2 will leave a portion of the more than 23 million people its infected with a litany of physical, cognitive and psychological impairments, like scarred lungs, post-viral fatigue and chronicheart damage. Whats still emerging is the extent to which the enduring disability will weigh on health systems and the labor force. That burden may continue the pandemics economic legacy for generations, adding to its unprecedented global cost predicted to reach as much$35.3 trillionthrough 2025. Here's how Bloomberg is tracking the virus.

Asianstockslooked poised for modest gains after U.S. equities rose to a record high on virus treatmentoptimism. Treasuries retreated, and futurespointed higher in Japan and Australia, but slipped in Hong Kong. The S&P 500 notched another all-time high as optimism mounted that the virus wouldnt hamper growth. Exxon Mobil, Pfizer and Raytheon were kicked out of the Dow Jones Industrial Average as part of the stock benchmarks biggestreshufflingin seven years, actions that will boost the influence of technology companies that have dominated the 2020 stock market. The Nasdaq Compositeclosed at a record for a second consecutive session, and the dollar strengthened. Elsewhere, oil rallied and gasoline surged to a five-month high and gold traded below $1,950 an ounce.

Chinas mega banks are ramping up their recruitment of fresh graduates as a record number enter the labor market,boosting employment even as lenders deal with plunging earnings and ballooning bad debt. The four biggest state banks kicked off their autumn campus hiring this month, instead of in November as in previous years.China Construction Bank plans to add 16,000 graduates this year, up from 13,000 last year, while Bank of China will increase its hiring by 15% to more than 10,000, according to their advertisements. This is in direct response to the governments call to protect jobs, saidTang Jianwei, a Shanghai-based analyst atBank of Communicationss research institute. Even though the big banks are facing pressure on their own earnings, they still need people to develop the business. Also its important for them to assume social responsibility.

TikTok and its Chinese parent company ByteDance are suing the Trump administration to challenge a ban on the fast-growing video app,bringing a geopolitical fight over technology and trade into a U.S. courtroom.Trump says TikTok is a security risk for user data. The company said the presidents decision was made for political reasons, is unconstitutional and violates rights to due process.While thebandoesnt take effect for weeks, it has escalated tensions between the world's largest economies. On Aug. 14, Trump ordered ByteDance to sell its U.S. assets and said the U.S. should receive a cut of the proceeds.MicrosoftandOraclehave already shown interest, which argues TikTok poses no security threat.

The rebound in Asia's best performing stock market since Marchis just getting started, according to money managers. Pakistans central bank has been among the most aggressive globally in cutting interest rates this year. That's reduced the double-digit returns from fixed income and bolstered the bullish case for equities. If rates remain at these levels for some time, they will continue to drive the market,saidAyub Khuhro, chief investment officer at Faysal Asset Management, whose assets have tripled to 35 billion rupees ($210 million) in the past year.Pakistans KSE-100 Index is up 36% from the end of March. A slowdown in the rate of new infections coupled with measures to boost an economy that shrank for the first time in seven decades prompted the Dubai-based FIM Partners in July to make Pakistan its biggest exposure after the Philippines.

This is whats caught our eye over the past 24 hours:

I find Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) fascinating and frustrating at the same time. It's a very interesting debate about the nature of money, but it leads us to the place we're arguably already in. MMT suggests that because the state has a monopoly on printing money the only limitation on debt issuance is inflation. The suggestion is that governments can borrow a lot more in order to fund social programs of all kinds so long as it doesn't spark price increases. In other words the limitation on debt issuance is grounded in politics, rather than the illusion of a "limited fiscal budget."

But politics is and always has been the problem. It's pretty difficult to take a look at U.S. national debt currently estimated at $26 trillionand conclude that budgets have really been a binding constraint. The binding constraint is what U.S. politicians are willing to stomach and historically that process has been mired in bipartisanship.

Bloomberg

Anyway, the limitations of MMT have been on my mind quite a lot lately as we ponder how the Covid-19 crisis and various policy responses are affecting the economy. As I've written in this space before, the crisis is leading to incredibly inequitable consequences for individuals but it's also benefiting the largest companies with the biggest monopoly power over labor. In other words, the balance of power is tilting even further towards capital and away from people. Where does MMT come into this? There's a perception that the theory can rectify that imbalance if the government uses its extra fiscal headroom to enact things like universal basic income or some sort of jobs guarantee. But what if the problem could be solved a lot more simply, or at least, a lot less divisively?

Christopher Mims at the Wall Street Journal has an excellent piece out describing all the ways our current economic system has favored capital over labor especially through tax rates that have encouraged capital investment over the hiring of humans. It begs the question of whether a more politically palatable option might be to overhaul the corporate tax rates rather than enact sweeping programs that can easily be portrayed as "socialist."As the coronavirus crisis exacerbates the dominance of capital over labor, it seems likely that taxes will be a first step in rectifying that imbalance.

You can follow Tracy Alloway on Twitter at@tracyalloway.

See original here:

Five Things You Need to Know to Start Your Day - Bloomberg

Posted in Basic Income Guarantee | Comments Off on Five Things You Need to Know to Start Your Day – Bloomberg

Why the G.O.P. Punted on a New Party Platform for the 2020 R.N.C. – The New York Times

Posted: at 4:04 pm

Every four years since 1856, the Republican Party has produced a platform articulating its priorities for the next president.

But like so much else disrupted by President Trump, the Republican National Committee has dispensed with producing a 2020 platform, instead passing a resolution renewing what delegates enacted in 2016, bashing the news media and offering wholehearted support for Mr. Trump.

The Republican Party has and will continue to enthusiastically support the presidents America-first agenda, reads the resolution, adopted this past weekend in Charlotte, N.C., just before the start of the Republican National Convention.

Most of what is on that agenda also remains a mystery and is subject to change. Several times this summer, Mr. Trump has been asked by friendly Fox News hosts to articulate his second-term priorities, and he has regularly failed to reveal his plans.

So while the G.O.P. platform of 1856 called for abolishing those twin relics of barbarism polygamy and slavery and building a transcontinental railroad, the partys official stance in 2020 is that it is for whatever Mr. Trump says.

After the resolution was adopted over the weekend, Mr. Trumps re-election campaign late Sunday night announced a set of core priorities for a second term in the form of 50 bullet points under the heading Fighting for You! The list functions as a greatest hits of Mr. Trumps recent proclamations, including, under his plans for confronting the coronavirus crisis, pledges such as Return to Normal in 2021 and Develop a Vaccine by The End Of 2020, which, of course, take place entirely in Mr. Trumps current term in office.

The priorities document, which for reasons unexplained capitalizes nearly every word in it, also pledges to Hold China Fully Accountable for Allowing the Virus to Spread around the World. There is also a pledge to send a manned mission to Mars and Get Allies to Pay their Fair Share.

There is no mention of abortion or the Second Amendment, which have long been animating features of the social conservative wing of Republican politics. The only foreign country mentioned by name is China, under a section titled end our reliance on China. A section on innovation offers a goal to Partner with Other Nations to Clean Up our Planets Oceans.

It offers no specifics.

This is probably the stuff hes been talking about that they think is going to move votes, but this is not a platform, said Justin Everett, a former Colorado state legislator who as a delegate to the 2016 Republican convention was on the partys platform drafting committee. It does not have anything about the conservative issues like the Second Amendment and life. Hes staying away from that.

In June, the Republican National Committee announced it would not write a 2020 platform. It has instead carried over its 2016 version, word for word, including more than three dozen outdated condemnations of the current president which was, when the document was written, Barack Obama.

Party officials punted on a 2020 platform as part of their logistical jujitsu when Mr. Trump ordered his nominating speech moved from Charlotte to Jacksonville, Fla., after Gov. Roy Cooper of North Carolina, a Democrat, refused to allow thousands of delegates to gather without social-distancing guidelines in place.

By July, the authorities in Jacksonville came to the same conclusion, and Mr. Trump announced that he would deliver his nomination acceptance speech Thursday night on the White House grounds, an unprecedented maneuver by a sitting president that has raised ethics concerns.

Though in practice, a partys platform often has little correlation with how a candidate campaigns or would govern as president and in 1996, Bob Dole publicly rejected elements of the Republican Party platform and said he hadnt read other parts of it it has for more than a century served as guidance for what political parties believe.

In June, Mr. Trump called for delegates to write a new short form party platform. No such document was ever produced, despite efforts by Jared Kushner, the presidents son-in-law, to create one.

Those who are involved in crafting party platforms tend to care quite a bit about what is in them. Bill Gribbin, a longtime Republican Party official who drafted and edited the 2016 platform, wrote a Wall Street Journal op-ed in June arguing the need to create a new version for 2020.

This year the platform should be Mr. Trumps chance to strut and show the troops how he has delivered for them, Mr. Gribbin wrote. The party could use it to recruit and sell G.O.P. candidates down the ballot. But how would you react to a sales pitch four years out of date?

Jim Bopp, a former Republican National Committee member from Indiana who sat on the partys platform committee at five different conventions, said the 2016 platform was the most conservative the party had ever passed.

It fairly reflects the Republican Party as it existed then and as it exists now, Mr. Bopp said on Monday.

But he added that not producing a new platform represents a missed opportunity for Mr. Trump to promote his first-term record.

You lose that opportunity to say, Look how we fulfilled the promises and what wonderful results we have obtained as a result, Mr. Bopp said. Certainly the campaign can fill that in and has filled that in.

The 2016 party platform, which the party resolution enacted on Sunday, states that it will remain in place until the 2024 Republican convention, and it includes language opposing gay marriage and endorsing parents rights to place their L.G.B.T.Q. children in conversion therapy.

We support the right of parents to consent to medical treatment for their minor children and urge enactment of legislation that would require parental consent for their daughter to be transported across state lines for abortion, the platform states.

Republicans this week found themselves maintaining that keeping the 2016 platform indicated that their partys principles and priorities have not shifted during the Trump era.

The tenets and the basis of the Republican Party are still the same being the party of conservative values, less taxes, border security, national security and life, said the former governor of Oklahoma, Mary Fallin, who served as a co-chair of the G.O.P.s 2016 platform committee. It would have been nice to have been able to write a new platform, but these are not normal times for the world.

See the rest here:

Why the G.O.P. Punted on a New Party Platform for the 2020 R.N.C. - The New York Times

Posted in Polygamy | Comments Off on Why the G.O.P. Punted on a New Party Platform for the 2020 R.N.C. – The New York Times

The G.O.P.s official stance in 2020 is that it is for whatever Trump says. – The New York Times

Posted: at 4:04 pm

Every four years since 1856, the Republican Party has produced a platform articulating its priorities for the next president.

But like so much else disrupted by President Trump, the Republican National Committee has dispensed with producing a 2020 platform, instead passing a resolution renewing what delegates enacted in 2016, bashing the news media and offering wholehearted support for Mr. Trump.

The Republican Party has and will continue to enthusiastically support the presidents America-first agenda, reads the resolution, adopted this past weekend in Charlotte, N.C., just before the start of the Republican National Convention.

Most of what is on that agenda also remains a mystery and is subject to change. Several times this summer, Mr. Trump has been asked by friendly Fox News hosts to articulate his second-term priorities, and he has regularly failed to reveal his plans.

So while the G.O.P. platform of 1856 called for abolishing those twin relics of barbarism polygamy and slavery and building a transcontinental railroad, the partys official stance in 2020 is that it is for whatever Mr. Trump says.

In June, the Republican National Committee announced it would not write a 2020 platform. It has instead carried over its 2016 version, word for word, including more than three dozen outdated condemnations of the current president which was, when the document was written, Barack Obama.

Though in practice, a partys platform often has little correlation with how a candidate campaigns or would govern as president, it has for more than a century served as guidance for what political parties believe.

Republicans this week found themselves maintaining that keeping the 2016 platform indicated that their partys principles and priorities have not shifted during the Trump era.

See more here:

The G.O.P.s official stance in 2020 is that it is for whatever Trump says. - The New York Times

Posted in Polygamy | Comments Off on The G.O.P.s official stance in 2020 is that it is for whatever Trump says. – The New York Times

Freethought Caucus in U.S. House reflects the rise, and political potential, of the ‘nones’ – GetReligion

Posted: at 4:04 pm

There are dozens of these special-interest caucuses in the House (.pdf here), covering anything from Cannabis to International Religious Freedom to LGBT Equality to rugby. One of the largest is the Prayer Caucus, chaired by North Carolina Baptist Mark Walker. The House members who lead the Ahmadiyya Muslim and American Sikh Caucuses are not adherents of those faiths, only interested friends.

There are now 13 House members in the Freethought Caucus, all of them Democrats, while 18 representatives decline to list a religious identity. Another 80 label themselves generic Protestant without specifying any particular church affiliation. See rundown on all Congress members here (.pdf).

These facts echo the increase of religiously unaffiliated nones, now 26 percent of the over-all U.S. population in Pew Research surveys. If effectively organized, they should exercise growing influence in the Democratic Party though churchgoing Catholic Joe Bidens nominating convention featured the customary God-talk.

Three Freethought members are among those who specify no religious identity: Representatives Sean Casten of Illinois, Pramila Jayapal of Washington and Mark Pocan of Wisconsin. The other participants in addition to Tlaib are Catholic (Dan Kildee of Michigan, Jerry McNerney of California), Jewish (Steve Cohen of Tennessee), Jamie Raskin of Maryland, Susan Wild of Pennsylvania), Episcopal (non-voting D.C. Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton), Lutheran (Zoe Lofgren of California) and Buddhist (Hank Johnson of Georgia).

Then there is Jared Huffman of California (official bio here) , who came out as the only openly non-theistic member of Congress in 2017. The following year, he co-founded the Freethought Caucus alongside Kildee, McNerney and Raskin, and serves as its co-chair.

Huffman would provide a personality focus for a feature about his young caucus, noting its new celebrity recruit. His irreligion causes no political problems because he wins lopsided votes in a bright blue district that covers the California coast from the Oregon line down to the Golden Gate Bridge.

The best coverage of Huffman and his religion, oddly, was in Britains liberal standby, The Guardian, a year ago. By this account, the Congressman is not an atheist or a foe of religion but defines himself as a non-religious humanist and seeker.

Theres a second religious angle on Huffman. He was raised in Independence, Mo., and in a faith headquartered there the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (renamed Community of Christ in 2000). It's one of those intriguing, smaller U.S. religions that get scant media coverage. See its current credo here. This denomination originated with family members of the Prophet Joseph Smith Jr., who rejected polygamy, and largely for that reason, broke with the larger Utah branch led by Brigham Young.

Huffmans media office is at 202-225-5187 or after hours at 202-604-3405. The contact person for the Freethought Caucus is his legislative aide Jordan Sciascia at jordan.sciascia@mail.house.gov or 2022255161.

Excerpt from:

Freethought Caucus in U.S. House reflects the rise, and political potential, of the 'nones' - GetReligion

Posted in Polygamy | Comments Off on Freethought Caucus in U.S. House reflects the rise, and political potential, of the ‘nones’ – GetReligion

CBP Is Still Buying Location Data From A Company Currently Being Investigated By Congress – Techdirt

Posted: at 4:03 pm

from the dodging-oversight-from-two-other-branches dept

Earlier this year, the Wall Street Journal revealed that ICE and CBP were buying location data from third-party data brokers -- something that seemed like a calculated move to dodge the requirements of the Supreme Court's Carpenter decision. There's a warrant requirement for historical cell site location data, but the two agencies appear to believe gathering tons of "pseudonymized" data to "help identify and locate" undocumented immigrants isn't a Fourth Amendment problem.

At this point, they're probably right. They may not be correct but they don't have court precedent telling them they can't do this. Not yet. So, they're doing it. It may not be immediately invasive as approaching a cell service provider for weeks or months of location data related to a single person, but this concerted effort to avoid running anything by a judge suggests even the DHS feels obtaining data this way is quasi-legal at best.

In late June, the House Committee on Oversight and Reform opened an investigation into Venntel's sale of location data to ICE and CBP. The Committee asked Venntel to hand over information about its data sales, whether or not it obtained consent from phone users to gather this data, and whether it applied any restrictions to the use of data by government agencies. The answers to the Committee's questions were due in early July. So far, Venntel has yet to respond.

Venntel's business hasn't slowed despite being investigated by Congress. Joseph Cox reports for Motherboard that CBP has just signed another deal with the data broker.

Earlier this month U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) paid nearly half a million dollars to a company that sells a product based on location data harvested from ordinary apps installed on peoples' phones, according to public procurement records reviewed by Motherboard.

[...]

CBP paid just under $476,000 for "Venntel Software" on August 5, according to the public procurement record.

Venntel's data collection does have limitations that makes it more useful for these agencies than others that have tried it.

The office of Senator Ron Wyden found that the criminal investigation unit of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) tried to use Venntel data to identify and track potential criminal suspects. The IRS failed to locate any targets of interest during the year-long contract.

The Venntel data is more useful for tracking "herds of people," the second former worker told Motherboard. The Wall Street Journal's February report mentioned agencies have used Venntel data to identify border crossings and then arrest people.

But even with these limitations, it's still powerful enough to be of concern, especially when it appears federal agencies are willing to buy data from brokers rather than approach service providers with subpoenas and warrants. Venntel's "product" comes from cellphone apps that collect location data. Venntel generates its own identifiers for each device to tie location data together. Customers like ICE can either ask for all data gathered at certain locations or search by identifier to collect all data tied to that device.

And it's not just about securing the border. ICE and CBP are also authorized to use Venntel's data to assist in "law enforcement operations." Venntel claims it doesn't sell access to local law enforcement agencies, but it appears CBP and ICE have the capability -- and presumably the willingness -- to perform proxy searches for agencies Venntel won't sell to.

If it's questionable for a private company to sell data to the federal government while under investigation from another branch of that same government, it's doubly questionable for a federal agency to continue doing business with a company being investigated by Congress. But people without papers must be caught, I guess, even if some rights must be violated (or evaded) to do it.

Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyones attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.

Techdirt is one of the few remaining truly independent media outlets. We do not have a giant corporation behind us, and we rely heavily on our community to support us, in an age when advertisers are increasingly uninterested in sponsoring small, independent sites especially a site like ours that is unwilling to pull punches in its reporting and analysis.

While other websites have resorted to paywalls, registration requirements, and increasingly annoying/intrusive advertising, we have always kept Techdirt open and available to anyone. But in order to continue doing so, we need your support. We offer a variety of ways for our readers to support us, from direct donations to special subscriptions and cool merchandise and every little bit helps. Thank you.

The Techdirt Team

Filed Under: 4th amendment, cbp, data brokers, dhs, ice, privacy, warrantCompanies: venntel

Follow this link:
CBP Is Still Buying Location Data From A Company Currently Being Investigated By Congress - Techdirt

Posted in Fourth Amendment | Comments Off on CBP Is Still Buying Location Data From A Company Currently Being Investigated By Congress – Techdirt

Special Report: Shot by police, thwarted by judges and geography – Reuters

Posted: at 4:03 pm

FORT WORTH, Texas (Reuters) - When David Collie slipped off his shirt as he set out one sultry night to visit some friends, he didnt know he was putting himself in grave danger. But he was. He now fit the description: shirtless, Black, male.

Moments later, Collie lay face down on the pavement, gunned down as a possible suspect in a crime he didnt commit.

The shooter was Fort Worth, Texas, police officer Hugo Barron. He and his partner had been looking for two shirtless Black men wanted for an armed robbery involving tennis shoes. When the cops spotted David Collie, they pulled into the apartment complex, got out of the squad car and started shouting commands at him.

Police dashboard camera video shows that Collie was walking away from the two cops as he pulled his hand out of his pocket and raised his arm. Thats when Barron fired his gun. A hollow-point bullet slammed into Collies back, punctured a lung and severed his spine, leaving him paralyzed from the waist down.

In the four years since then, Collie, now 37 years old, has lived in nursing homes, afflicted with infections, pressure sores, and bouts of crushing depression. As he talked about the July 2016 shooting and what it took from him, wails from an elderly patient echoed down the corridor. The odors of urine and excrement wafted in from the hall. Collie closed his eyes and exhaled. Paralyzed over some tennis shoes? Come on, man, he said. Youre playing with a human life here.

To many Americans, the outlines of Collies encounter with police have become dismayingly familiar in recent years and all the more so since the May 25 death of George Floyd, a Black man, under the knee of a Minneapolis cop sparked mass protests against racism and aggressive police tactics. The fate of Collies attempt at redress has become familiar, too, and now underpins demands that police be held accountable when they kill or seriously injure people.

In a lawsuit filed in federal court in Fort Worth, Collie accused Barron of excessive force, a civil rights violation under the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. He thought that any money from a settlement or jury award would give him some measure of independence after the shooting cost him his job and derailed his plans to return to college. He also thought Barron should be held responsible for what he did.

Collie didnt get very far. Barron, who hadnt been disciplined or charged with any wrongdoing for the shooting, argued that he had acted reasonably on a fear that Collie was about to shoot his partner. Collie said he took his hand from his pocket to point to where he was going when Barron shot him. The judge sided with Barron though Collie had nothing to do with the robbery the cops were investigating, had no gun on him, and was 30 feet away with his back to Barron when the cop fired.

The judge ruled that Barron was entitled to qualified immunity, a legal doctrine meant to protect police and other government officials from frivolous lawsuits. A federal appeals court, saying the case exemplifies an individuals being in the wrong place at the wrong time, upheld the lower courts decision.

You shoot me, paralyze me, put me in a nursing home, ruin everything, and I cant get no type of compensation? Collie said. He leaned back in his bed. This aint justice.

Collie would have stood a much better chance of getting the justice he sought if he had been able to sue elsewhere. Thats because, in excessive force lawsuits, courts in some parts of the United States are more likely to deny cops immunity than others.

In a review of 529 cases since 2005, Reuters found significant differences in how the federal appeals courts treat qualified immunity.

Plaintiffs fared worst in the court that heard Collies appeal, the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, where judges habitually follow precedents that favor police. The court granted 64% of police requests for immunity in excessive force cases.

By contrast, the 9th Circuit has set a higher bar for police. The appellate judges there granted immunity in just 42% of police requests for immunity in excessive force cases.

The regional disparities are also evident in federal district courts, where excessive force lawsuits are actually heard and which must follow precedents set by their respective appellate courts. In an analysis of 435 federal district court rulings in excessive force cases from 2014 to 2018 in California and Texas, the two most populous states, judges in Texas granted immunity to police at nearly twice the rate of California judges 59% of cases, compared to 34%.

A plaintiffs chances are so much better in California that one who was armed in an encounter with police is more likely to overcome qualified immunity than one who was unarmed in Texas.

For years, the words qualified immunity were seldom heard outside of legal and academic circles, where critics have long contended that the doctrine is unjust. But outrage over the killing of George Floyd and incidents like it have made this 50-year-old legal doctrine created by the U.S. Supreme Court itself a target of broad public demands for comprehensive reform to rein in police behavior.

The criticism that qualified immunity denies justice to victims of police brutality is well-founded. As Reuters reported just two weeks before Floyds death, the immunity defense has been making it easier for cops to kill or injure civilians with impunity. Based on federal appellate court records, the report showed, courts have been granting cops immunity at increasing rates in recent years even when judges found the behavior so egregious that it violated a plaintiffs civil rights thanks largely to continual Supreme Court guidance that has favored police.

The regional differences Reuters has found in how qualified immunity is granted only add to arguments that the doctrine is unfair. Its essential to our system of government that access to justice should be the same in Dallas and Houston as in Phoenix and Las Vegas, said Paul Hughes, a prominent civil rights attorney who frequently argues before the U.S. Supreme Court. It shouldnt turn on the happenstance of geography as to whether or not they (plaintiffs) have a remedy.

The happenstance of geography shows up in a comparison of Collies case to the one Benny Herreras family filed after a cop killed him in 2011. Police in Tustin, California, were looking for the 31-year-old father of four after a former girlfriend reported that he had assaulted her. They found him walking along a lightly trafficked road, behaving erratically. As in Collies case, a cop opened fire when he thought Herrera was about to shoot him. Like Collie, Herrera did not have a gun.

In the Herrera familys lawsuit, the cop was denied immunity. The district court judge, and the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals after him, weighed the same question as the courts in Collies case: Did the shooter act reasonably on a fear for his and others safety when he used deadly force? In this instance, the court said no. The case could move forward.

Before the familys lawsuit got to trial, the plaintiffs secured a $1.4 million settlement. Herrera always wanted his children to be financially secure, Elizabeth Landeros, mother of one of his children, said. They lost their father, she said, but at least now theyll be OK.

Qualified immunity plays out differently from region to region because of differences in judicial philosophies among those regions, lawyers and legal experts said.

Over the years, the Supreme Court has repeatedly told lower courts to use an objective analysis when weighing police claims of immunity: They must determine whether the force used was reasonable or excessive, and if the latter, whether the specific type of force used has already been defined as illegal under clearly established precedent.

But how judges answer those questions is influenced by their personal views on police authority and individuals rights, and their views often reflect the cultural and political landscapes they inhabit. In typically conservative areas, judges tend to favor police, while in more liberal parts of the country, they tend to favor plaintiffs. Those tendencies get baked into circuit court precedents that all judges in that circuit must follow.

Most judges are from the area where they serve and grew up in that culture, and whether they are liberal or conservative, they are bound to apply the law as its developed in that circuit, said Karen Blum, a professor at Suffolk University Law School in Boston and a critic of qualified immunity. Is it fair? No.

The liberal-leaning 9th Circuit, where the Herrera family sued, has established in its precedents powerful support for plaintiffs. Among them are rulings cautioning against throwing out excessive force cases before a jury has had a chance to weigh an officers credibility, and requiring more than officers claims that they feared for their safety as grounds for granting immunity.

The Supreme Court has repeatedly rebuked the 9th Circuit for its willingness to deny cops immunity, and especially for applying, as the high court wrote in a 2011 ruling, a high level of generality when analyzing the question of clearly established precedent.

Judges in the 5th Circuit, where Collies case was heard, are more likely to prioritize police power over citizens rights and liberties. Courts in the 5th Circuit habitually cite precedents that favor police by treating an officers perception of a threat as the key consideration. They do the same when deciding whether the force used was illegal under clearly established precedent, requiring that the material facts of the two cases be nearly identical.

If you approach these cases by placing a thumb on the scale in favor of police officers, you will tend to search the record for any basis in which to conclude that the actions police officers ultimately took were justified, said Hughes, the civil rights lawyer.

Across the country, different judicial approaches result in different outcomes for similar cases including numerous cases like Collies, in which cops claimed they were countering a threat to themselves or others when they shot someone from behind.

In Indio, California, a cop was denied immunity after fatally shooting Ernest Foster Jr three times in the back during a foot chase at a shopping plaza, even though police recovered a gun from the scene. And in Denver, Colorado, an officer was denied immunity after shooting Michael Valdez in the back, severely injuring him, though the cop himself had been shot during the preceding car chase.

These cases were in the 9th and 10th Circuits, respectively, both relatively plaintiff-friendly, based on the Reuters analysis of how often they granted qualified immunity.

But in Houston, a cop was granted immunity after fatally shooting Gerrit Perkins in the back while Perkins crouched in a closet holding a cordless phone. Perkins was unarmed. And in Bradley County, Arkansas, an officer was granted immunity after shooting Davdrin Goffin in the back, partially paralyzing him, even though he had already been patted down for weapons. He, too, was unarmed.

These cases were in the more police-friendly 5th and 8th Circuits, respectively, based on how often they granted qualified immunity.

Minnesota, where George Floyd lived, is also in the 8th Circuit. The day state investigators arrested the Minneapolis officer who knelt on Floyds neck as he died, the appellate court granted immunity to cops in Burnsville, Minnesota, who killed Map Kong, a man in a mental health crisis, when they shot him in the back as he ran away holding a knife.

Police officers and their supporters say qualified immunity is essential to ensure that police can make split-second decisions in dangerous situations without having to worry about being sued later. If we expose police officers to these suits on a regular basis, who would ever want to be a police officer? said Kent Scheidegger, a lawyer with the pro-law enforcement Criminal Justice Legal Foundation, based in Sacramento, California.

However, denial of immunity doesnt necessarily mean a certain loss for police. It means only that a lawsuit can move toward a jury trial or a financial settlement. District court data show that when cops were denied immunity in California and Texas, the cases were settled at about the same rate, 64% of the time. In nearly all of the remaining cases, a jury decided in favor of the police.

Even when a plaintiff secures recompense through a settlement or a jury award, the cops are nearly always indemnified against personal liability, meaning local governments typically named as defendants or their insurers cover the costs.

This widespread practice, legal experts said, undermines the ability of lawsuits to deter excessive force, particularly since cops are rarely prosecuted or otherwise disciplined for their actions. There is no sense of justice being done, said Blum, the Suffolk University law professor. The goal should be to deter, in some way to have a price paid if you engage in this kind of behavior.

Blum is part of a broad coalition of lawyers, scholars, civil rights groups and politicians who in recent years have called for qualified immunity to be reined in. As currently applied, they say, the doctrine too often denies even an attempt at justice to people who believe they are victims of excessive force and fails to hold police accountable.

An increasing number of judges of all stripes have also expressed frustration with the doctrine and the Supreme Courts repeated interventions that have made it harder to deny immunity. In an opinion last year, Judge Don Willett, appointed to the 5th Circuit by President Donald Trump, put it bluntly: The real-world functioning of modern immunity practice essentially heads government wins, tails plaintiff loses leaves many victims violated but not vindicated.

The justices have offered few explanations for their stance on qualified immunity beyond writing in opinions that the doctrine is important to society as a whole and balances individuals rights with the need to curb litigation that could unduly burden government officials. Two of the justices liberal Sonia Sotomayor and conservative Clarence Thomas have criticized qualified immunity in written opinions in recent years. All nine current justices declined to be interviewed for this article.

Amid the protests in the wake of Floyds death, expectations ran high that the Supreme Court would finally move to restrict or end qualified immunity by taking up at least one of several petitions to hear cases backed by opponents of the doctrine. But in early June, it rejected those petitions.

Congress moved swiftly to draft police reform measures, but legislative proposals, including some that would have ended qualified immunity, stalled as Democrats and Republicans deadlocked over issues of addressing racial inequality and police accountability. President Donald Trumps White House and some Republicans in Congress have called eliminating qualified immunity for police a non-starter on the grounds that it would deter police officers from doing their jobs properly.

In the summer of 2016, David Collie was putting his life in order and putting a troubled past behind him.

More than a decade earlier, as a student at Texas Southern University in Houston, he had become involved in a gang, indulging in glamor, clothes, money and girls, he said. When he pulled a gun on an adversary and took his car for a ride, Collie was charged with robbery and evading arrest and spent 11 years in prison.

Two months before Barron shot him, Collie had landed a full-time gig building supermarket produce displays. He liked the work, and he was cheered to be saving money before resuming college classes in cinematography in the fall. Work and school, that was always the plan, he said.

On the night of July 27, he got a call. Some friends who lived in the same apartment complex were arguing. It was late, and he had to be at work at 7 a.m., but he decided to walk over to the couples home to try to calm them and provide a diversion for their children, who called him Uncle David.

Officer Barron of the Fort Worth police and Tarrant County Deputy Sheriff Vanesa Flores were working off-duty paid security detail for a nearby apartment complex that night. They had just heard from dispatch that two shirtless Black men had made off with two pairs of tennis shoes, valued at $225 each, in a deal organized through Facebook. One of the suspects, the officers heard, had brandished a gun.

Just after midnight, police dashboard camera video shows, the two officers were walking toward Collie when Flores trains her flashlight on him. Barron pulls out his pistol. Collie turns around briefly and then continues to walk away.

Collie said the pair were shouting commands at him and over each other. He was confused, unsure about what to do, he said. They asked me where I was going, I was pointing, he said. I was trying to comply.

The instant Collie pulled his right hand out of his pocket to point, Barron fired. You didnt have to shoot me, Collie recalled saying after the force of the bullet slammed him to the pavement.

Time elapsed from the cops first appearing on the dash-cam to the shooting: five seconds.

The Fort Worth Police Department declined to comment and declined to make Barron available for comment. Flores, who no longer works for the Tarrant County Sheriffs Office, could not be reached.

After the Fort Worth police internal affairs division investigated the shooting, the Tarrant County Criminal District Attorneys Office presented the evidence to a grand jury, which declined to indict Barron on any criminal charges. A spokeswoman for the office noted that Flores did not cause, participate in, or contribute to the shooting, and had no further comment.

Collie endured a difficult two-month recovery in hospital. In addition to his paralysis and other medical issues that linger to this day, he was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder. Doctors removed a bullet fragment from his chest seven weeks after the shooting.

He was also shackled to his hospital bed for nearly the entire time because police had charged him with aggravated assault on a public servant. A grand jury eventually declined to indict him.

In March 2017, Collie filed his lawsuit in federal district court in Fort Worth, naming Barron, Flores, the City of Fort Worth, Tarrant County, and several other officers as defendants. Any money Collie got would allow him to afford a home and a car modified for his disability. He also hoped to pay for physical therapy to try to walk again, though doctors said that was a long shot. Its like the world is saying, Im sorry, were wrong we did thatWere going to help you out, help you get back on your feet, Collie said of the recompense he sought.

Less than a month after Collie sued, lawyers for Barron, provided and paid for by Fort Worth, requested qualified immunity for the cop. Early on, Judge John McBryde dismissed Collies claims against all defendants other than Barron and Fort Worth.

In court papers, Barrons lawyers said the cop had acted reasonably because he believed Collie had a handgun and was moving to take aim at Flores. Flores had also told investigators that night that she thought she saw something in Collies hand. In using reasonable force to stop an apparent deadly threat, Officer Barron violated none of Plaintiffs constitutional or other rights and is entitled to qualified immunity, Barrons lawyers argued.

Collie had no gun. A boxcutter was found in the grass near where Collie went down, according to the police report. Collie said he always carried a boxcutter with him because it was necessary for his job. He adamantly denied that he was holding the boxcutter when he raised his hand to point. He said he believes Barron cited it as an excuse to cover up a mistake.

Barrons request for immunity asserted that whether Collie was armed or not was irrelevant. Merely arguing that in the end it must somehow be unreasonable to shoot an unarmed suspect is not enough to let a lawsuit go forward, the request said.

Collies lawyers countered that Barron created a threat in his mind that did not exist. A forensic expert they hired to map the scene, capture images using a drone and analyze the dash-cam footage concluded that Collie was not holding an object, let alone pointing it at Flores, when he was shot.

In July 2017, McBryde granted Barrons request for immunity. In his decision, he relied on a stringent 5th Circuit standard for finding that excessive force was used: not only that the plaintiffs injury resulted from force that was clearly excessive, but also that the excessive force was clearly unreasonable.

As a Texas judge, McBryde supported his ruling that shooting Collie was reasonable by drawing on 5th Circuit precedents that elevate an officers perception of a threat as the key consideration in weighing an immunity claim. He cited a 2003 precedent that force is presumed to be reasonable when police perceive a threat, even if alternative courses of action were available.

Even if Collie had nothing in his hand and did not point at Flores, he had no right to a trial, McBryde said in his ruling, because the test is whether Barron acted reasonably in light of what he perceived.

McBryde declined to comment.

Collie fared no better with his appeal to the 5th Circuit. Noting that Collie fit the description of one of the suspects, the appeals court in 2018 agreed that Barrons perception that night mattered most.

The appeals court cited its own precedents. One was a 2008 ruling, Ramirez v. Knoulton, which said that cops do not have to wait to act against a threat and that courts should not second guess the timing of that realization. Another was a 2016 ruling that singled out a Houston cops perception of an immediate threat as the most important consideration in granting immunity. In that case, the cop claimed he shot Ricardo Salazar-Limon in the back, paralyzing him, after Salazar reached for his waistband. Salazar was unarmed.

A spokesman for the 5th Circuit declined to comment for this article.

Manny Ramirez, president of the Fort Worth Police Officers Association, said the courts made the right decision to throw out Collies suit. Barron is a good officer, Ramirez added. His work product speaks for itself. The legal system, he said, must recognize the dangers officers face on the job.

Barron was moved to a special tactical unit of the Fort Worth police in 2018.

Plaintiffs and civil rights activists said the 5th Circuit is providing an easy out for cops who use excessive force because it is particularly receptive to the argument that they perceived a lethal threat.

Daniel Harawa, a lawyer affiliated with the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, called this defense How to get out of a civil lawsuit 101. He said he fears that as this line of defense succeeds, we almost incentivize police officers to reflexively say, I saw him reaching, I saw an object.

The cop who shot and killed Benny Herrera used the same defense as Barron. But that was in California, not Texas.

On the morning of Dec. 17, 2011, Herrera was visiting his former girlfriend, Hilda Ramirez. He spent time playing with her children and making them breakfast. Over the meal, Ramirez later told detectives, Herrera said he had a feeling something big was going to happen that day.

Around 2 p.m., he left for home. He returned just 15 minutes later, his demeanor changed paranoid, pacing back and forth, his eyes glossy. Ramirez recognized the signs: Herrera battled substance abuse for much of his life. He had been in and out of prison, too, for armed robbery, drug possession and parole violations. Court records show that in two instances, girlfriends had called the cops because they feared for their safety after Herrera became agitated.

When Herrera saw Ramirez texting her new boyfriend, he punched her in the head, grabbed her cellphone and left. Ramirez called 911 to report what had happened. She told the operator that Herrera had not used a weapon and did not carry one. A dispatcher relayed to the responding officers that Herrera was not known to carry weapons.

Minutes later, Tustin police officers Brian Miali and Osvaldo Villarreal in separate vehicles found Herrera walking along El Camino Real where it runs alongside Interstate 5. A cigarette dangled from Herreras lips. It was a cold and cloudy afternoon, and he kept his right hand in the pocket of his black hoodie.

Dashboard camera video from the scene shows Herrera running away and then turning around and skipping backward as he veers into the middle of the street. The officers close in, trying to hem in Herrera between the two vehicles. Each cop drew his gun.

Get your hand out of your pocket! Villarreal shouted as his vehicle approached Herrera, who at that instant wheeled around toward Villarreal with his right arm flailing. Almost immediately, Villarreal fired his gun through the cars open passenger side window.

Villarreal told investigators that he felt trapped when Herrera turned toward him and that he believed Herrera was armed and would shoot him. When Herrera charged at me and started to pull his hand out of his pocket, Villarreal told investigators, I knew he had the drop on me, and as I came up, I fired twice.

But Herrera was unarmed. A pack of cigarettes, a syringe, and several coins were recovered near his body. Toxicology tests found methamphetamine and tranquilizers in his blood.

After investigating the incident, the Orange County District Attorneys Office concluded in a January 2013 report that Villarreals use of deadly force was reasonable because he thought Herrera was armed. It recommended no criminal charges.

Herreras family filed an excessive force lawsuit in federal district court in Santa Ana against Villarreal and the City of Tustin.

Villarreal quickly requested qualified immunity. Judge Josephine Staton denied the request. She cited a 9th Circuit ruling, Deorle v. Rutherford, that sets a higher bar for cops than the 5th Circuit precedents cited in Collies case. It says that a simple statement by an officer that he fears for his safety or the safety of others is not enough; there must be objective factors to justify such a concern.

Staton declined to comment.

Villarreal appealed, but in 2016, the 9th Circuit upheld the lower courts decision. It cited the Deorle precedent and others to conclude that Herrera was not an immediate threat to the officers. Herrera did not try to flee, and Villarreal gave him no time to act upon the order to take his hand out of his pocket before shooting, the appeals court said.

The ruling also cited precedents that clarified when deadly force is justified, including one from 2005 that said a suspects involvement in a domestic incident does not necessarily make him an immediate threat to an officer.

A spokeswoman for the 9th Circuit declined to comment for this article.

The appellate courts decision meant the excessive force claim could proceed. Soon, the plaintiffs faced a choice: continue to trial or accept a settlement with the city.

Elizabeth Landeros, a former girlfriend of Herrera and mother of one of his children, said she felt Villarreal should be held responsible for leaving her child without a father. But the familys lawyers were wary that the jury would be persuaded by the defenses arguments that Herrera was a dangerous man with a criminal history and a drug problem. The family ultimately agreed to accept a $1.4 million settlement, split among Herreras parents and his four children.

A spokesman for Tustin police said, The litigation ended to the satisfaction of all parties, and declined to comment further. Villarreal retired from the department and could not be reached.

Without the recompense he sought in his lawsuit, David Collie gets by on Social Security disability benefits and Medicaid. In early June, he moved to an assisted living facility. He still shares a bathroom, but now has his own living space. His mother, Pamela McCloud, whose house doesnt have wheelchair access, got training as a home health aide so that if her son is ever able to move into his own place, she can care for him.

Collie has closely followed media coverage of the protests sparked by George Floyds death and the ensuing debate about police reform. The part I like about it, as a Black man that experienced it and sees whats going on, is now you have white people and people from different nationalities saying, Yeah, lets be honest about it.

About his own situation, he said that without his Christian faith, I probably wouldnt even want to be alive. His faith has allowed him to forgive Barron, he said, but he was wrong.

Collie said he thinks bad apples may taint many police departments with racism and excessive force across the country, but in the main, he defends cops, including the Fort Worth police. Its an honorable profession, he said.

Reporting by Andrew Chung in Fort Worth, Texas; Lawrence Hurley in Washington, D.C.; Andrea Januta in New York; and Jackie Botts and Jaimi Dowdell in Los Angeles. Edited by John Blanton and Janet Roberts.

Read more from the original source:
Special Report: Shot by police, thwarted by judges and geography - Reuters

Posted in Fourth Amendment | Comments Off on Special Report: Shot by police, thwarted by judges and geography – Reuters

Shot by Police, Thwarted by Judges and Geography – Claims Journal

Posted: at 4:03 pm

FORT WORTH, Texas When David Collie slipped off his shirt as he set out one sultry night to visit some friends, he didnt know he was putting himself in grave danger. But he was. He now fit the description: shirtless, Black, male.

Moments later, Collie lay face down on the pavement, gunned down as a possible suspect in a crime he didnt commit.

The shooter was Fort Worth, Texas, police officer Hugo Barron. He and his partner had been looking for two shirtless Black men wanted for an armed robbery involving tennis shoes. When the cops spotted David Collie, they pulled into the apartment complex, got out of the squad car and started shouting commands at him.

Police dashboard camera video shows that Collie was walking away from the two cops as he pulled his hand out of his pocket and raised his arm. Thats when Barron fired his gun. A hollow-point bullet slammed into Collies back, punctured a lung and severed his spine, leaving him paralyzed from the waist down.

In the four years since then, Collie, now 37 years old, has lived in nursing homes, afflicted with infections, pressure sores, and bouts of crushing depression. As he talked about the July 2016 shooting and what it took from him, wails from an elderly patient echoed down the corridor. The odors of urine and excrement wafted in from the hall. Collie closed his eyes and exhaled. Paralyzed over some tennis shoes? Come on, man, he said. Youre playing with a human life here.

To many Americans, the outlines of Collies encounter with police have become dismayingly familiar in recent years and all the more so since the May 25 death of George Floyd, a Black man, under the knee of a Minneapolis cop sparked mass protests against racism and aggressive police tactics. The fate of Collies attempt at redress has become familiar, too, and now underpins demands that police be held accountable when they kill or seriously injure people.

In a lawsuit filed in federal court in Fort Worth, Collie accused Barron of excessive force, a civil rights violation under the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. He thought that any money from a settlement or jury award would give him some measure of independence after the shooting cost him his job and derailed his plans to return to college. He also thought Barron should be held responsible for what he did.

Collie didnt get very far. Barron, who hadnt been disciplined or charged with any wrongdoing for the shooting, argued that he had acted reasonably on a fear that Collie was about to shoot his partner. Collie said he took his hand from his pocket to point to where he was going when Barron shot him. The judge sided with Barron though Collie had nothing to do with the robbery the cops were investigating, had no gun on him, and was 30 feet away with his back to Barron when the cop fired.

The judge ruled that Barron was entitled to qualified immunity, a legal doctrine meant to protect police and other government officials from frivolous lawsuits. A federal appeals court, saying the case exemplifies an individuals being in the wrong place at the wrong time, upheld the lower courts decision.

You shoot me, paralyze me, put me in a nursing home, ruin everything, and I cant get no type of compensation? Collie said. He leaned back in his bed. This aint justice.

Collie would have stood a much better chance of getting the justice he sought if he had been able to sue elsewhere. Thats because, in excessive force lawsuits, courts in some parts of the United States are more likely to deny cops immunity than others.

In a review of 529 cases since 2005, Reuters found significant differences in how the federal appeals courts treat qualified immunity.

Plaintiffs fared worst in the court that heard Collies appeal, the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, where judges habitually follow precedents that favor police. The court granted 64% of police requests for immunity in excessive force cases.

By contrast, the 9th Circuit has set a higher bar for police. The appellate judges there granted immunity in just 42% of police requests for immunity in excessive force cases.

The regional disparities are also evident in federal district courts, where excessive force lawsuits are actually heard and which must follow precedents set by their respective appellate courts. In an analysis of 435 federal district court rulings in excessive force cases from 2014 to 2018 in California and Texas, the two most populous states, judges in Texas granted immunity to police at nearly twice the rate of California judges 59% of cases, compared to 34%.

A plaintiffs chances are so much better in California that one who was armed in an encounter with police is more likely to overcome qualified immunity than one who was unarmed in Texas.

For years, the words qualified immunity were seldom heard outside of legal and academic circles, where critics have long contended that the doctrine is unjust. But outrage over the killing of George Floyd and incidents like it have made this 50-year-old legal doctrine created by the U.S. Supreme Court itself a target of broad public demands for comprehensive reform to rein in police behavior.

The criticism that qualified immunity denies justice to victims of police brutality is well-founded. As Reuters reported just two weeks before Floyds death, the immunity defense has been making it easier for cops to kill or injure civilians with impunity. Based on federal appellate court records, the report showed, courts have been granting cops immunity at increasing rates in recent years even when judges found the behavior so egregious that it violated a plaintiffs civil rights thanks largely to continual Supreme Court guidance that has favored police.

The regional differences Reuters has found in how qualified immunity is granted only add to arguments that the doctrine is unfair. Its essential to our system of government that access to justice should be the same in Dallas and Houston as in Phoenix and Las Vegas, said Paul Hughes, a prominent civil rights attorney who frequently argues before the U.S. Supreme Court. It shouldnt turn on the happenstance of geography as to whether or not they (plaintiffs) have a remedy.

The happenstance of geography shows up in a comparison of Collies case to the one Benny Herreras family filed after a cop killed him in 2011. Police in Tustin, California, were looking for the 31-year-old father of four after a former girlfriend reported that he had assaulted her. They found him walking along a lightly trafficked road, behaving erratically. As in Collies case, a cop opened fire when he thought Herrera was about to shoot him. Like Collie, Herrera did not have a gun.

In the Herrera familys lawsuit, the cop was denied immunity. The district court judge, and the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals after him, weighed the same question as the courts in Collies case: Did the shooter act reasonably on a fear for his and others safety when he used deadly force? In this instance, the court said no. The case could move forward.

Before the familys lawsuit got to trial, the plaintiffs secured a $1.4 million settlement. Herrera always wanted his children to be financially secure, Elizabeth Landeros, mother of one of his children, said. They lost their father, she said, but at least now theyll be OK.

Qualified immunity plays out differently from region to region because of differences in judicial philosophies among those regions, lawyers and legal experts said.

Over the years, the Supreme Court has repeatedly told lower courts to use an objective analysis when weighing police claims of immunity: They must determine whether the force used was reasonable or excessive, and if the latter, whether the specific type of force used has already been defined as illegal under clearly established precedent.

But how judges answer those questions is influenced by their personal views on police authority and individuals rights, and their views often reflect the cultural and political landscapes they inhabit. In typically conservative areas, judges tend to favor police, while in more liberal parts of the country, they tend to favor plaintiffs. Those tendencies get baked into circuit court precedents that all judges in that circuit must follow.

Most judges are from the area where they serve and grew up in that culture, and whether they are liberal or conservative, they are bound to apply the law as its developed in that circuit, said Karen Blum, a professor at Suffolk University Law School in Boston and a critic of qualified immunity. Is it fair? No.

The liberal-leaning 9th Circuit, where the Herrera family sued, has established in its precedents powerful support for plaintiffs. Among them are rulings cautioning against throwing out excessive force cases before a jury has had a chance to weigh an officers credibility, and requiring more than officers claims that they feared for their safety as grounds for granting immunity.

The Supreme Court has repeatedly rebuked the 9th Circuit for its willingness to deny cops immunity, and especially for applying, as the high court wrote in a 2011 ruling, a high level of generality when analyzing the question of clearly established precedent.

Judges in the 5th Circuit, where Collies case was heard, are more likely to prioritize police power over citizens rights and liberties. Courts in the 5th Circuit habitually cite precedents that favor police by treating an officers perception of a threat as the key consideration. They do the same when deciding whether the force used was illegal under clearly established precedent, requiring that the material facts of the two cases be nearly identical.

If you approach these cases by placing a thumb on the scale in favor of police officers, you will tend to search the record for any basis in which to conclude that the actions police officers ultimately took were justified, said Hughes, the civil rights lawyer.

Across the country, different judicial approaches result in different outcomes for similar cases including numerous cases like Collies, in which cops claimed they were countering a threat to themselves or others when they shot someone from behind.

In Indio, California, a cop was denied immunity after fatally shooting Ernest Foster Jr three times in the back during a foot chase at a shopping plaza, even though police recovered a gun from the scene. And in Denver, Colorado, an officer was denied immunity after shooting Michael Valdez in the back, severely injuring him, though the cop himself had been shot during the preceding car chase.

These cases were in the 9th and 10th Circuits, respectively, both relatively plaintiff-friendly, based on the Reuters analysis of how often they granted qualified immunity.

But in Houston, a cop was granted immunity after fatally shooting Gerrit Perkins in the back while Perkins crouched in a closet holding a cordless phone. Perkins was unarmed. And in Bradley County, Arkansas, an officer was granted immunity after shooting Davdrin Goffin in the back, partially paralyzing him, even though he had already been patted down for weapons. He, too, was unarmed.

These cases were in the more police-friendly 5th and 8th Circuits, respectively, based on how often they granted qualified immunity.

Minnesota, where George Floyd lived, is also in the 8th Circuit. The day state investigators arrested the Minneapolis officer who knelt on Floyds neck as he died, the appellate court granted immunity to cops in Burnsville, Minnesota, who killed Map Kong, a man in a mental health crisis, when they shot him in the back as he ran away holding a knife.

Police officers and their supporters say qualified immunity is essential to ensure that police can make split-second decisions in dangerous situations without having to worry about being sued later. If we expose police officers to these suits on a regular basis, who would ever want to be a police officer? said Kent Scheidegger, a lawyer with the pro-law enforcement Criminal Justice Legal Foundation, based in Sacramento, California.

However, denial of immunity doesnt necessarily mean a certain loss for police. It means only that a lawsuit can move toward a jury trial or a financial settlement. District court data show that when cops were denied immunity in California and Texas, the cases were settled at about the same rate, 64% of the time. In nearly all of the remaining cases, a jury decided in favor of the police.

Even when a plaintiff secures recompense through a settlement or a jury award, the cops are nearly always indemnified against personal liability, meaning local governments typically named as defendants or their insurers cover the costs.

This widespread practice, legal experts said, undermines the ability of lawsuits to deter excessive force, particularly since cops are rarely prosecuted or otherwise disciplined for their actions. There is no sense of justice being done, said Blum, the Suffolk University law professor. The goal should be to deter, in some way to have a price paid if you engage in this kind of behavior.

Blum is part of a broad coalition of lawyers, scholars, civil rights groups and politicians who in recent years have called for qualified immunity to be reined in. As currently applied, they say, the doctrine too often denies even an attempt at justice to people who believe they are victims of excessive force and fails to hold police accountable.

An increasing number of judges of all stripes have also expressed frustration with the doctrine and the Supreme Courts repeated interventions that have made it harder to deny immunity. In an opinion last year, Judge Don Willett, appointed to the 5th Circuit by President Donald Trump, put it bluntly: The real-world functioning of modern immunity practice essentially heads government wins, tails plaintiff loses leaves many victims violated but not vindicated.

The justices have offered few explanations for their stance on qualified immunity beyond writing in opinions that the doctrine is important to society as a whole and balances individuals rights with the need to curb litigation that could unduly burden government officials. Two of the justices liberal Sonia Sotomayor and conservative Clarence Thomas have criticized qualified immunity in written opinions in recent years. All nine current justices declined to be interviewed for this article.

Amid the protests in the wake of Floyds death, expectations ran high that the Supreme Court would finally move to restrict or end qualified immunity by taking up at least one of several petitions to hear cases backed by opponents of the doctrine. But in early June, it rejected those petitions.

Congress moved swiftly to draft police reform measures, but legislative proposals, including some that would have ended qualified immunity, stalled as Democrats and Republicans deadlocked over issues of addressing racial inequality and police accountability. President Donald Trumps White House and some Republicans in Congress have called eliminating qualified immunity for police a non-starter on the grounds that it would deter police officers from doing their jobs properly.

In the summer of 2016, David Collie was putting his life in order and putting a troubled past behind him.

More than a decade earlier, as a student at Texas Southern University in Houston, he had become involved in a gang, indulging in glamor, clothes, money and girls, he said. When he pulled a gun on an adversary and took his car for a ride, Collie was charged with robbery and evading arrest and spent 11 years in prison.

Two months before Barron shot him, Collie had landed a full-time gig building supermarket produce displays. He liked the work, and he was cheered to be saving money before resuming college classes in cinematography in the fall. Work and school, that was always the plan, he said.

On the night of July 27, he got a call. Some friends who lived in the same apartment complex were arguing. It was late, and he had to be at work at 7 a.m., but he decided to walk over to the couples home to try to calm them and provide a diversion for their children, who called him Uncle David.

Officer Barron of the Fort Worth police and Tarrant County Deputy Sheriff Vanesa Flores were working off-duty paid security detail for a nearby apartment complex that night. They had just heard from dispatch that two shirtless Black men had made off with two pairs of tennis shoes, valued at $225 each, in a deal organized through Facebook. One of the suspects, the officers heard, had brandished a gun.

Just after midnight, police dashboard camera video shows, the two officers were walking toward Collie when Flores trains her flashlight on him. Barron pulls out his pistol. Collie turns around briefly and then continues to walk away.

Collie said the pair were shouting commands at him and over each other. He was confused, unsure about what to do, he said. They asked me where I was going, I was pointing, he said. I was trying to comply.

The instant Collie pulled his right hand out of his pocket to point, Barron fired. You didnt have to shoot me, Collie recalled saying after the force of the bullet slammed him to the pavement.

Time elapsed from the cops first appearing on the dash-cam to the shooting: five seconds.

The Fort Worth Police Department declined to comment and declined to make Barron available for comment. Flores, who no longer works for the Tarrant County Sheriffs Office, could not be reached.

After the Fort Worth police internal affairs division investigated the shooting, the Tarrant County Criminal District Attorneys Office presented the evidence to a grand jury, which declined to indict Barron on any criminal charges. A spokeswoman for the office noted that Flores did not cause, participate in, or contribute to the shooting, and had no further comment.

Collie endured a difficult two-month recovery in hospital. In addition to his paralysis and other medical issues that linger to this day, he was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder. Doctors removed a bullet fragment from his chest seven weeks after the shooting.

He was also shackled to his hospital bed for nearly the entire time because police had charged him with aggravated assault on a public servant. A grand jury eventually declined to indict him.

In March 2017, Collie filed his lawsuit in federal district court in Fort Worth, naming Barron, Flores, the City of Fort Worth, Tarrant County, and several other officers as defendants. Any money Collie got would allow him to afford a home and a car modified for his disability. He also hoped to pay for physical therapy to try to walk again, though doctors said that was a long shot. Its like the world is saying, Im sorry, were wrong we did thatWere going to help you out, help you get back on your feet, Collie said of the recompense he sought.

Less than a month after Collie sued, lawyers for Barron, provided and paid for by Fort Worth, requested qualified immunity for the cop. Early on, Judge John McBryde dismissed Collies claims against all defendants other than Barron and Fort Worth.

In court papers, Barrons lawyers said the cop had acted reasonably because he believed Collie had a handgun and was moving to take aim at Flores. Flores had also told investigators that night that she thought she saw something in Collies hand. In using reasonable force to stop an apparent deadly threat, Officer Barron violated none of Plaintiffs constitutional or other rights and is entitled to qualified immunity, Barrons lawyers argued.

Collie had no gun. A boxcutter was found in the grass near where Collie went down, according to the police report. Collie said he always carried a boxcutter with him because it was necessary for his job. He adamantly denied that he was holding the boxcutter when he raised his hand to point. He said he believes Barron cited it as an excuse to cover up a mistake.

Barrons request for immunity asserted that whether Collie was armed or not was irrelevant. Merely arguing that in the end it must somehow be unreasonable to shoot an unarmed suspect is not enough to let a lawsuit go forward, the request said.

Collies lawyers countered that Barron created a threat in his mind that did not exist. A forensic expert they hired to map the scene, capture images using a drone and analyze the dash-cam footage concluded that Collie was not holding an object, let alone pointing it at Flores, when he was shot.

In July 2017, McBryde granted Barrons request for immunity. In his decision, he relied on a stringent 5th Circuit standard for finding that excessive force was used: not only that the plaintiffs injury resulted from force that was clearly excessive, but also that the excessive force was clearly unreasonable.

As a Texas judge, McBryde supported his ruling that shooting Collie was reasonable by drawing on 5th Circuit precedents that elevate an officers perception of a threat as the key consideration in weighing an immunity claim. He cited a 2003 precedent that force is presumed to be reasonable when police perceive a threat, even if alternative courses of action were available.

Even if Collie had nothing in his hand and did not point at Flores, he had no right to a trial, McBryde said in his ruling, because the test is whether Barron acted reasonably in light of what he perceived.

McBryde declined to comment.

Collie fared no better with his appeal to the 5th Circuit. Noting that Collie fit the description of one of the suspects, the appeals court in 2018 agreed that Barrons perception that night mattered most.

The appeals court cited its own precedents. One was a 2008 ruling, Ramirez v. Knoulton, which said that cops do not have to wait to act against a threat and that courts should not second guess the timing of that realization. Another was a 2016 ruling that singled out a Houston cops perception of an immediate threat as the most important consideration in granting immunity. In that case, the cop claimed he shot Ricardo Salazar-Limon in the back, paralyzing him, after Salazar reached for his waistband. Salazar was unarmed.

A spokesman for the 5th Circuit declined to comment for this article.

Manny Ramirez, president of the Fort Worth Police Officers Association, said the courts made the right decision to throw out Collies suit. Barron is a good officer, Ramirez added. His work product speaks for itself. The legal system, he said, must recognize the dangers officers face on the job.

Barron was moved to a special tactical unit of the Fort Worth police in 2018.

Plaintiffs and civil rights activists said the 5th Circuit is providing an easy out for cops who use excessive force because it is particularly receptive to the argument that they perceived a lethal threat.

Daniel Harawa, a lawyer affiliated with the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, called this defense How to get out of a civil lawsuit 101. He said he fears that as this line of defense succeeds, we almost incentivize police officers to reflexively say, I saw him reaching, I saw an object.

The cop who shot and killed Benny Herrera used the same defense as Barron. But that was in California, not Texas.

On the morning of Dec. 17, 2011, Herrera was visiting his former girlfriend, Hilda Ramirez. He spent time playing with her children and making them breakfast. Over the meal, Ramirez later told detectives, Herrera said he had a feeling something big was going to happen that day.

Around 2 p.m., he left for home. He returned just 15 minutes later, his demeanor changed paranoid, pacing back and forth, his eyes glossy. Ramirez recognized the signs: Herrera battled substance abuse for much of his life. He had been in and out of prison, too, for armed robbery, drug possession and parole violations. Court records show that in two instances, girlfriends had called the cops because they feared for their safety after Herrera became agitated.

When Herrera saw Ramirez texting her new boyfriend, he punched her in the head, grabbed her cellphone and left. Ramirez called 911 to report what had happened. She told the operator that Herrera had not used a weapon and did not carry one. A dispatcher relayed to the responding officers that Herrera was not known to carry weapons.

Minutes later, Tustin police officers Brian Miali and Osvaldo Villarreal in separate vehicles found Herrera walking along El Camino Real where it runs alongside Interstate 5. A cigarette dangled from Herreras lips. It was a cold and cloudy afternoon, and he kept his right hand in the pocket of his black hoodie.

Dashboard camera video from the scene shows Herrera running away and then turning around and skipping backward as he veers into the middle of the street. The officers close in, trying to hem in Herrera between the two vehicles. Each cop drew his gun.

Get your hand out of your pocket! Villarreal shouted as his vehicle approached Herrera, who at that instant wheeled around toward Villarreal with his right arm flailing. Almost immediately, Villarreal fired his gun through the cars open passenger side window.

Villarreal told investigators that he felt trapped when Herrera turned toward him and that he believed Herrera was armed and would shoot him. When Herrera charged at me and started to pull his hand out of his pocket, Villarreal told investigators, I knew he had the drop on me, and as I came up, I fired twice.

But Herrera was unarmed. A pack of cigarettes, a syringe, and several coins were recovered near his body. Toxicology tests found methamphetamine and tranquilizers in his blood.

After investigating the incident, the Orange County District Attorneys Office concluded in a January 2013 report that Villarreals use of deadly force was reasonable because he thought Herrera was armed. It recommended no criminal charges.

Herreras family filed an excessive force lawsuit in federal district court in Santa Ana against Villarreal and the City of Tustin.

Villarreal quickly requested qualified immunity. Judge Josephine Staton denied the request. She cited a 9th Circuit ruling, Deorle v. Rutherford, that sets a higher bar for cops than the 5th Circuit precedents cited in Collies case. It says that a simple statement by an officer that he fears for his safety or the safety of others is not enough; there must be objective factors to justify such a concern.

Staton declined to comment.

Villarreal appealed, but in 2016, the 9th Circuit upheld the lower courts decision. It cited the Deorle precedent and others to conclude that Herrera was not an immediate threat to the officers. Herrera did not try to flee, and Villarreal gave him no time to act upon the order to take his hand out of his pocket before shooting, the appeals court said.

The ruling also cited precedents that clarified when deadly force is justified, including one from 2005 that said a suspects involvement in a domestic incident does not necessarily make him an immediate threat to an officer.

A spokeswoman for the 9th Circuit declined to comment for this article.

The appellate courts decision meant the excessive force claim could proceed. Soon, the plaintiffs faced a choice: continue to trial or accept a settlement with the city.

Elizabeth Landeros, a former girlfriend of Herrera and mother of one of his children, said she felt Villarreal should be held responsible for leaving her child without a father. But the familys lawyers were wary that the jury would be persuaded by the defenses arguments that Herrera was a dangerous man with a criminal history and a drug problem. The family ultimately agreed to accept a $1.4 million settlement, split among Herreras parents and his four children.

A spokesman for Tustin police said, The litigation ended to the satisfaction of all parties, and declined to comment further. Villarreal retired from the department and could not be reached.

Without the recompense he sought in his lawsuit, David Collie gets by on Social Security disability benefits and Medicaid. In early June, he moved to an assisted living facility. He still shares a bathroom, but now has his own living space. His mother, Pamela McCloud, whose house doesnt have wheelchair access, got training as a home health aide so that if her son is ever able to move into his own place, she can care for him.

Collie has closely followed media coverage of the protests sparked by George Floyds death and the ensuing debate about police reform. The part I like about it, as a Black man that experienced it and sees whats going on, is now you have white people and people from different nationalities saying, Yeah, lets be honest about it.

About his own situation, he said that without his Christian faith, I probably wouldnt even want to be alive. His faith has allowed him to forgive Barron, he said, but he was wrong.

Collie said he thinks bad apples may taint many police departments with racism and excessive force across the country, but in the main, he defends cops, including the Fort Worth police. Its an honorable profession, he said.

Excerpt from:
Shot by Police, Thwarted by Judges and Geography - Claims Journal

Posted in Fourth Amendment | Comments Off on Shot by Police, Thwarted by Judges and Geography – Claims Journal

Petitions of the week: Atlantic Ocean canyons, Utah wilderness roads and more – SCOTUSblog

Posted: at 4:03 pm

Posted Thu, August 20th, 2020 4:03 pm by Andrew Hamm

This week we highlight cert petitions that ask the Supreme Court to weigh in on a pair of disputes with environmental implications. Massachusetts Lobstermens Association v. Ross involves the intersection of two federal statutes and a stretch of the Atlantic Ocean containing three deep-sea canyons and four underwater mountains. The National Marine Sanctuaries Act governs the protection of marine areas, delegating authority to the president but also requiring a specific process for the designation of marine sanctuaries, subject to review by Congress and affected states. In contrast, the Antiquities Act authorizes the president to declare national monuments on land owned or controlled by the federal government, without the same review process. The Massachusetts Lobstermens Association sued to challenge a proclamation by President Barack Obama designating 3.2 million acres of the Atlantic Ocean as the Northeast Canyons and Seamounts Marine National Monument. The association argues that the monument exceeds the presidents power under the Antiquities Act and circumvents the National Marine Sanctuaries Act. Though President Donald Trump lifted the prohibition on commercial fishing in the area, the association argues the case is not moot because the monument otherwise remains unaffected.

In Kane County, Utah v. United States and United States v. Kane County, Utah, Kane County and Utah sued the federal government to claim title to the rights-of-way for 15 roads crossing federal land. Two environmental groups, the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance and The Wilderness Society, sought to intervene in the dispute because of their interest in preventing possible harm to the surrounding area from increased traffic. The petitions ask the Supreme Court to weigh in on whether the environmental groups, under Rule 24 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, have demonstrated a right to intervene in the case.

These and otherpetitions of the weekare below the jump:

Himsel v. 4/9 Livestock, LLC20-72Issue: Whether a state statute violates the takings clause of the United States Constitution when it provides complete immunity from nuisance and trespass liability for an industrial-scale hog facility newly sited next to long-standing family homes, even though the facility causes noxious waste substances to continuously invade those homes, making it impossible for the families to use and enjoy their properties where they have lived for decades.

Kane County, Utah v. United States20-82Issues: (1) WhetherRule 24(a)(2) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedureallows intervention as of right where the movant does not have a significant, cognizable interest in the lawsuit; and (2) whether the United States adequately represents its title, which is the only interest at issue in a quiet title suit.

Jones v. Kalbaugh20-83Issues: (1) Whether the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit improperly focused on the knowledge and intentions of the suspect, rather than the facts knowable to the officers, in reversing the district courts grant of qualified immunity in an excessive force case; and (2) whether the 10th Circuit analyzed clearly established law at too high a level of generality by relying on general statements of Fourth Amendment excessive force principles rather than identifying a case in which officers acting under similar circumstances were held to have violated the Fourth Amendment.

Hutchings v. Ross20-86Issue: WhetherRule 10(c) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedurepermits a habeas petitioner to rely on a state court order appended to, but never mentioned in, his original federal habeas petition to supply the core operative facts necessary to satisfy the relation-back standard set forth inMayle v. Felix.

United States v. Kane County, Utah20-96Issue: Whether an advocacy organizations environmental concerns qualify as an interest required byRule 24(a)(2) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedurefor the organization to intervene as of right as a party defendant in a pending civil action, where no judicial relief could be granted against that organization in the action and its environmental concerns are unrelated to any claim or defense that the organization could itself assert in the action.

Massachusetts Lobstermens Association v. Ross20-97Issues: (1) Whether, in conflict with the holdings of the U.S. Courts of Appeals for the 5th and 11th Circuits and the National Marine Sanctuaries Act, the Antiquities Act applies to ocean areas beyond United States sovereignty where the federal government has only limited regulatory authority; and (2) whether the president can evade the Antiquities Acts smallest area requirement, including designating ocean monuments larger than most states, by vaguely referencing resources or an ecosystem as the objects to be protected.

Posted in Himsel v. 4/9 Livestock, LLC, Kane County, Utah v. U.S., Jones v. Kalbaugh, Hutchings v. Ross, U.S. v. Kane County, Utah, Massachusetts Lobstermens Association v. Ross, Featured, Cases in the Pipeline

Recommended Citation: Andrew Hamm, Petitions of the week: Atlantic Ocean canyons, Utah wilderness roads and more, SCOTUSblog (Aug. 20, 2020, 4:03 PM), https://www.scotusblog.com/2020/08/petitions-of-the-week-atlantic-ocean-canyons-utah-wilderness-roads-and-more/

Read this article:
Petitions of the week: Atlantic Ocean canyons, Utah wilderness roads and more - SCOTUSblog

Posted in Fourth Amendment | Comments Off on Petitions of the week: Atlantic Ocean canyons, Utah wilderness roads and more – SCOTUSblog