11/16/2020
Breaking Case. Police Officers will be held liable for failing to protect persons from danger created or enhanced by the officer's affirmative acts, within certain parameters.
Here is the article by Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly:
On ‘state-created danger,’ 1st Circuit joins majority
Rejects qualified immunity
By: Kris Olson November 12, 2020
Police officers can be held liable for failing to protect plaintiffs from danger created or enhanced by their affirmative acts, the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has decided, becoming the 10th circuit to adopt the state-created danger substantive due process doctrine.
Writing for the panel, Judge Sandra L. Lynch noted that while the 1st Circuit had not previously adopted the doctrine, it had repeatedly outlined its “core elements” in earlier cases.
Plaintiff’s counsel
Plaintiff’s counsel
Most notable of those earlier cases was 2005’s Rivera v. Rhode Island, in which the court held that the mother of a girl who had been killed after telling police repeatedly about threats to her life if she testified at a murder trial had not made out a viable state-created danger claim because the defendant officers’ actions were essential to the investigation and performed appropriately.
The present case, Irish, et al. v. Fowler, et al., in which two Maine State Police detectives allegedly triggered a suspect’s rampage by leaving a misguided voicemail on his cellphone, was different, the court concluded.
The 1st Circuit specified that a viable state-created danger claim has four components: A state actor must commit affirmative acts that create or enhance a danger to the plaintiff; that danger must be specific to the plaintiff and distinct from the danger to the general public; and the acts must both cause the plaintiff’s harm and shock the conscience.
The 1st Circuit added that “deliberate indifference” might shock the conscience, as long as the plaintiff could show the defendant “actually knew of a substantial risk of serious harm and disregarded that risk.”
Citing Rivera, the defendants in Irish argued that the use of basic law enforcement investigative tools could never serve as the “affirmative act” underlying a state-created danger claim.
But Rivera “established no such thing,” the 1st Circuit clarified.
The defendants also argued that violations of state law and department policy could not serve as the basis of a state-created danger claim. But the panel said that such violations “are, at the very least, relevant to determining the conscience-shocking nature of the defendants’ conduct.”
The 34-page decision is Lawyers Weekly No. 01-229-20.
Right time, right facts
The 1st Circuit was clearly waiting for a case with an egregious enough set of facts to adopt the state-created danger doctrine, said the plaintiffs’ attorney, Scott J. Lynch of Lewiston, Maine.
Previous cases in which the court stopped just short of endorsing the doctrine were lacking in one or more of the necessary elements, he added.
“This case is so bad, it was the right time and the right place” to adopt the doctrine, agreed Suffolk University Law School Professor Karen Blum.
To Lynch and others, the more striking part of the decision was that the court denied qualified immunity to the defendants.
More than a few courts have found that officers had no way of knowing that their conduct might prevent the use of qualified immunity in the absence of a previous case with facts on “all fours” with their own situation, Lynch said.
To Blum, the Irish decision is an antidote of sorts to recent Supreme Court rulings that have left the waters murky.
For a plaintiff to get any kind of relief is a “step in the right direction,” she said. Specifically, Blum said it was “refreshing” to see courts take their inquiry beyond whether there is a case directly on point within the circuit.
“How the 1st Circuit looked at cases that were out of the circuit is certainly very helpful to plaintiffs,” Providence attorney Georgi J. Vogel-Rosen agreed.
Boston attorney Howard Friedman said that aspect of the Irish decision should encourage plaintiffs’ attorneys to broaden their research when assessing their clients’ claims. If they find a “coalescence of rules” in other circuits, that may be enough to get past qualified immunity, he said.
Cases like Irish should educate people that qualified immunity “is not an absolute shield,” said Boston attorney Leonard H. Kesten, who frequently defends police officers.
Efforts to reach the Maine Attorney General’s Office were unsuccessful.
Unheeded warnings
At approximately 11:13 a.m. on July 15, 2015, Brittany Irish reported to the Bangor Police Department that Anthony Lord, a former boyfriend, had kidnapped and r***d her repeatedly the night before.
After being referred to the Maine State Police, Irish repeatedly told detectives Jason Fowler and Micah Perkins that Lord “would become terribly violent” if he knew she was speaking with them.
Despite what the detectives had learned about Lord, they did not perform the customary check of the s*x offender registry, nor did they take steps available to them to detain Lord, the plaintiffs allege.
Instead, the detectives called Lord’s cellphone, and when he did not answer, Perkins left a voicemail, identifying himself as a State Police detective and asking Lord to return his call.
Irish, et al. v. Fowler, et al.
THE ISSUE: Does the 1st Circuit recognize the state-created danger substantive due process doctrine, which says that police officers can be held liable for failing to protect plaintiffs from danger created or enhanced by their affirmative acts?
DECISION: Yes (1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals)
LAWYERS: Scott J. Lynch of Lynch & Van D**e, Lewiston, Maine (plaintiffs)
Christopher C. Taub and Aaron M. Frey, of the Maine Attorney General’s Office (defense)
Less than two hours later, Perkins received notice of a possible suspicious fire, which turned out to be on the property of Irish’s parents. That set off a search for Lord beset by delays and missteps, according to the plaintiffs.
Between 3 and 4 a.m., Irish’s mother, Kimberly, told the State Police that she wanted to go with her daughter and her daughter’s boyfriend in her car and spend the night in the State Police parking lot, but she was informed that would be a “dangerous mistake.” She was assured, falsely, that there were “officers in the vicinity” ready to respond if there were any problems.
Around the same time, just six miles away, Lord was attacking a man with a hammer and stealing the man’s truck and guns. Lord then drove to Kimberly Irish’s home.
Once there, he fired one round with the stolen shotgun at the front door to break the lock, hitting Brittany in the arm. Lord then kicked down the door and shot Brittany’s boyfriend nine times as Brittany watched.
After her mother pushed her out a bathroom window, Brittany fled and jumped into a passing truck driven by Carleton Eddy. But before Eddy could pull away, however, Lord managed to jump into the bed of the truck and shot Eddy three times in the neck. He then pulled Brittany out of the truck.
It took nine hours for police to free Brittany and apprehend Lord.
The District Court below concluded that the plaintiffs had presented triable issues of fact as to whether the detectives had violated their substantive due process rights under a state-created danger theory.
However, the court also found that the defendants were shielded by qualified immunity because existence of the state-created danger doctrine was not clearly settled law in the 1st Circuit, especially since two circuits — the 5th and 11th — had rejected the doctrine.
The lower court judge dismissed the case, viewing it as “not within the court’s purview to select between the majority and minority rules.”
No qualified immunity
With respect to whether the defendants could avail themselves of qualified immunity, the 1st Circuit noted that its determination turned on the second prong of the test, whether the unlawfulness of the defendants’ conduct was “clearly established at the time.”
lynch-sandra“A circuit split does not foreclose a holding that the law was clearly established, as long as the defendants could not reasonably believe that we would follow the minority approach.”
— Judge Sandra L. Lynch
The defendants reiterated their argument below that, because the 1st Circuit had not previously recognized the state-created danger doctrine, the law was not clearly established. But the court called that argument “simply incorrect.”
The landscape was far different in 1997, when the 1st Circuit decided a case on which the defendants were relying, Soto v. Flores, the panel added. At that point, the 1st Circuit had never discussed the “contours” of the doctrine, and the history of the doctrine was “uneven,” Lynch explained.
“All this had changed by the time Detective Perkins left the voicemail for Anthony Lord,” Lynch wrote.
By July 2015, the 1st Circuit had discussed the state-created danger doctrine at least a dozen times, even if it had never found it applicable to the facts of a specific case, Lynch noted. Nor did it matter that the 5th and 11th circuits had rejected the state-created danger doctrine.
“A circuit split does not foreclose a holding that the law was clearly established, as long as the defendants could not reasonably believe that we would follow the minority approach,” Lynch wrote.
The panel called Rivera a “critical warning bell” that officers could be held liable under the state-created danger doctrine when their non-essential affirmative acts enhance a danger to a witness.
The 1st Circuit also called “wrong” the defendants’ premise that they were immune from suit because no factually similar cases alerted them that their conduct was impermissible, identifying factually similar cases from the 9th and 7th circuits that it said gave the defendants notice that they could be held liable for violating the Due Process Clause.
The panel added that the officers were also on notice that they could be liable for a constitutional violation for failing to take steps to mitigate a danger they had created and misleading the victim about the level of police protection she had.
The defendants’ “apparent utter disregard for police procedure” could also contribute to a jury’s conclusion that, with their deliberate indifference to a danger they knowingly created, the defendants engaged in conduct that “shocks the conscience.”
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Police officers can be held liable for failing to protect plaintiffs from danger created or enhanced by their affirmative acts, the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has decided, becoming the 10th …