GOP-sponsored "Back the Blue Act" May Make it Much Harder to Sue Police for Rights Violations
Trump promised to restore "law and order" , and we can't have pesky things like "rights" getting in the way of that :
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...ble-to-sue-the-police/?utm_term=.65e18f99d765
Trump promised to restore "law and order" , and we can't have pesky things like "rights" getting in the way of that :
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...ble-to-sue-the-police/?utm_term=.65e18f99d765
A new GOP bill would make it virtually impossible to sue the police
By Radley Balko May 24 at 3:51 PM
Keeping with the Trump administration’s law-and-order rhetoric, Republicans in the House and Senate recently introduced a bill they’re calling the Back the Blue Act of 2017. The Senate bill was introduced by John Cornyn (R-Tex.), and is co-sponsored by 15 senators, all Republicans. The identical House bill was introduced by Ted Poe (R-Tex.), and includes five co-sponsors, also all Republicans. The bill would create new federal crimes, impose federal police over the will of local officials and voters and shield police officers from virtually any civil liability, even in cases of egregious misconduct.
Let’s look first at the new federal crimes. The bill would create new federal crimes for killing, attempting to kill or conspiring to kill a state or local law enforcement officer who works for a police agency that receives federal funding. Because nearly all police agencies receive some sort of federal funding, including most local sheriff’s departments and town police, the bill basically makes it a federal crime to kill, attempt to kill or conspire to kill any police officer (as well as any judge or first responder). The bill would also allow for the federal death penalty in such cases, and it would impose limits on the ability of defendants to file habeas petitions in federal court after they’ve exhausted their appeals.
The legislation would make also it a federal crime to assault any law enforcement officer (again, using the hook of federal funding). An assault resulting in bodily harm would bring a federal mandatory minimum of between two and 10 years in prison, depending on the severity of any injuries to the officer, plus an additional 20-year mandatory minimum if a dangerous weapon was used “during and in relation to the assault.” An assault not resulting in bodily harm would carry a sentence of up to a year in prison.
But perhaps the most disturbing part of the bill is the new restrictions it puts on suing police officers for constitutional violations.
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(long article, much more at the link)
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