My View: A Lot of Finger Pointing By Leaders Not Getting Police Reform Done

By David M. Greenwald
Executive Editor

Washington, DC – One of the big sticking points for comprehensive police reform at the national level was changes to qualified immunity.

It’s a mess.  You have Senator Tim Scott blaming his Democratic counterparts, progressives blaming moderate Democrats, and I wonder if the whole bill was flawed and wrongly focused in the first place.

Qualified immunity has become a sticking point for many on the left—even though I actually don’t believe that they understand what it is or the limits of removing it.  The left, led by people like Representative Ayanna Pressley and Senators Ed Markey and Elizabeth Warren, have introduced legislation to fully end the qualified immunity.

The doctrine of qualified immunity “for too long has shielded law enforcement from accountability and denied recourse for the countless families robbed of their loved ones,” Senator Pressley said earlier this year.  “There can be no justice without healing and accountability, and there can be no true accountability with qualified immunity.”

Put simply, qualified immunity shields government officials from being held personally liable for constitutional violations.  Qualified immunity prevents personal liability then under federal law, so long as the officials do not violate “clearly established” law.

In the controlling opinion—Harlow v. Fitzgerald (1982)—the court established that the plaintiff could overcome qualified immunity only by showing that the defendant’s conduct “violate[d] clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.”

The bill was of course broader than just qualified immunity.  Any effort to change qualified immunity and standards for prosecuting use of force have run into a FOP (The Fraternal Order of Police) buzz saw.

Efforts by the progressive left to “defund police” or reallocate funding toward community infrastructure and social services have run into moderate concerns.

Senator Scott back in April proposed a compromise on qualified immunity, suggesting that the liability be shifted from individual cops to their departments (although it’s not clear how that would differ from now).

Part of the problem with the idea that cops can be held personally accountable is that, as the Reason article pointed out, “police departments already finance the vast majority of payouts when a police officer is not granted qualified immunity and subsequently loses a lawsuit in his or her professional capacity.”

“Sen. Tim Scott’s proposal—requiring the city to bear the costs of these suits, instead of officers—would make transparent what already happens in over 99 percent of cases,” writes Joanna C. Schwartz, a professor of law at the University of California, Los Angeles and an expert in qualified immunity. “We absolutely need to find ways to increase officer accountability—by, for example, changing union protections that make it difficult to fire bad officers.”

That’s my problem with the whole notion of eliminating qualified immunity as a path to police reform.  First, departments already, in effect, indemnify their officers even when held personally accountable.  Second, individual accountability is unlikely to change individual behavior because many cops do not believe they have committed misconduct (a reason why body worn cameras are not shown to reduce use-of-force complaints).

There is a notion from Scott and other moderates that the approach should be to “make sure that the bad apples are punished.”

But, as I have written so many times over the last seven years, the idea that there are a few bad apples misunderstands the nature of the problem of policing.  True—there are a few cops with multiple complaints, bad shootings, and what not.  But the saying that a few bad apples comes from “a few bad apples spoil the bunch” embodies the overall problem.

Removing the few bad apples from a barrel still leaves the problem of the barrel of apples that have already been infected and contaminated.  Moreover, what we have found is that FOP, the department, the fellow officers and often sympathetic politicians act to protect the problem officers and fail to root out the heart of the problem.

While I support going after qualified immunity, I have a number of higher priorities.

First, I would argue, rather than civil liability, we need to have an easy process by which to decertify bad cops and prevent them from simply getting fired from one agency and going to another.

Second, we need to nationally address use-of-force standards which right now allow police to articulate fear for their safety and avoid accountability.

As some publications have pointed out—ironically, after Derek Chauvin was convicted for killing George Floyd, “congressional aides felt less pressure to pass a major police reform package.”

That’s a problem because the conditions that led to the death of Floyd have not changed.  Chauvin was the exception that proves the rule rather than the start of a new world order.

My laundry list would then be changes to use of force, decertification, and then I would focus on police encounters themselves—moving toward a mental health response like Davis has with Crisis-NOW and other communities have with CAHOOTS—and finally addressing pretext stops in ways proposed by Berkeley, San Francisco and some proposals out of San Diego.

Police should not be able to pull someone over for a minor traffic violation and use that stop to search a vehicle and otherwise turn a routine top into a potential point of crisis.

Likewise, police are simply not the best equipped to deal with a whole host of psychological emergencies.

Finally, while I know Congress likes to address things as a package, I would suggest perhaps one point at time—start with the easy stuff and tackle the hard stuff later.

Author

  • David Greenwald

    Greenwald is the founder, editor, and executive director of the Davis Vanguard. He founded the Vanguard in 2006. David Greenwald moved to Davis in 1996 to attend Graduate School at UC Davis in Political Science. He lives in South Davis with his wife Cecilia Escamilla Greenwald and three children.

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9 comments

  1.  Chauvin was the exception that proves the rule rather than the start of a new world order.

    A “new world order”.

    Gee, I didn’t realize that was the goal.

      1. Chauvin’s conviction, I’m arguing does not represent a change in how prosecution and accountability of police is handled, rather it represents an extreme case within the current system.

  2. ‘Defund the Police’ Was a Catchy Slogan. It’s Also Why a Policing Bill Fell Apart
    https://time.com/6101118/police-reform-bill-talks-collapse/

    Same photo as the Vanguard 😉

    Same point I oft make.  Use poor slogans, make outrageous statements, ask for extreme things — these things don’t lead to compromise, they lead to no change.  Those who want change:  stop enabling your extremists; they are hurting your cause.

    (Still waiting for clarification on helicopter surveillance and attack dogs being use against homeless seeking shelter from the cold . . . #tick tick tick# – #crickets#.)

    1. “Defund the Police” was not (originally) a slogan.

      The subsequently-bastardized slogan seems to be “keep the police, but add more services” (which have been traditionally handled by health care providers).

      (Along with, “we promise you that this will save money” for fiscally-challenged cities.)

  3. Hi Alan,

    I was referring to the case on I Street when helicopters were deployed and dogs used to scare a homeless man out of an abandoned building.  There was a story about it in the Enterprise but I no longer subscribe so could not access it.  If you want to know about the canine patrol, I suggest you ask our independent police auditor.

    Cesca

    1. One time (not so long ago), a sheriff’s helicopter was used to “scare” me and my friend (who owned the 4-wheel drive vehicle) out of some private property, on the Sonoma coast.

      We both survived, and did not need therapy as a result.

      Apparently, a neighbor called the sheriff as a result of (yet another) small group of people, who were letting their dogs run loose around there.

       

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