The duty of the police to protect individuals

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Jeff White

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This comes up faily regularly. Today I received an email from a police training organization that explains it and the pertinant court cases failrly well:
http://rs6.net/tn.jsp?t=a6m5j7bab.0...ww.patc.com/weeklyarticles/duty2protect.shtml
LEO’s Duty to Protect Persons from 3rd Party Harm

By Jack Ryan


What is the law enforcement duty to protect citizens from harm caused by third parties? This type of claim arises in a variety of circumstances. For example, police fail to protect a spouse from their violent partner; a hostage is killed by the hostage taker while the police are trying to negotiate a peaceful end to a hostage situation; an informant is killed while trying to make a drug buy; or a witness is killed in an effort to prevent their testimony. These are just some examples of how these cases arise. The only clear cut case of a duty to protect relates to prisoners who are in government custody. The reason for this duty is that the person who is involuntarily held cannot protect themselves.

The common thread in all duty to protect cases is the fact that the law enforcement officers are not the cause of the harm. Instead, some other person causes the harm and the allegation is that law enforcement should have acted to stop that person from causing the harm. In many of these cases the allegation is that if law enforcement had followed the generally- accepted practices of the profession then the harm would not have occurred. For example, if the negotiator had followed generally-accepted practices of negotiation then the hostage-taker would not have killed the hostage.

The question that is frequently asked is: Under what circumstances does the state or municipal entities have a constitutional duty to protect citizens from violence at the hands of private actors? The general answer to this question is that there is no constitutional duty to protect free citizens. The only clear case of a duty to protect is when a citizen is in the custody of a state or municipality.

In DeShaney v. Winnebago County, the Supreme Court held that “nothing in the language of the Due Process Clause itself requires the State to protect the life, liberty, and property of its citizens against invasion by private actors.” The DeShaney case involved a tragic case of child abuse. Joshua DeShaney first came to the attention of the Winnebago County Department of Social Services (DSS) in January of 1982. After receiving a report that 2-year-old Joshua may be the victim of abuse, the DSS interviewed his father who denied the allegation. The DSS received numerous other reports over the next two years including reports by emergency room personnel who believed that Joshua’s numerous, suspicious injuries were the result of child abuse. During this time Joshua’s father had entered an agreement with the DSS. However, he failed to comply with the conditions of this agreement. Though there were numerous reports of suspected abuse in the DSS files, no action was ever taken. In March of 1994, Joshua’s father beat him so severely that he fell into a life-threatening coma. It was later determined that Joshua had suffered numerous head injuries over a long period of time and as a result would have to be institutionalized for the remainder of his life. Joshua, through his mother, brought a §1983 action alleging that the county had deprived him of liberty without due process by failing to intervene and protect him from his father’s abuse.

The U.S. Supreme Court held that the constitution is not a source of any affirmative obligation on the state or its subdivisions to protect its citizens. Since “the Due Process Clause does not require the State to provide its citizens with particular protective services, it follows that the State cannot be held liable under the Clause for injuries that could have been averted had it chosen to provide them.” The Court did note that when “the State takes a person into custody and holds him there against his will, the Constitution imposes on it a corresponding duty to assume some responsibility for his safety and general well-being…The affirmative duty to protect arises not from the State’s knowledge of the individual’s predicament or from its expressions of intent to help him, but from the limitation which it has imposed on his freedom to act on his own behalf.” In Joshua DeShaney’s case the Court noted that the county had done nothing to create Joshua’s predicament or to make him more vulnerable to it. This note by the Court left an opening which some courts have used to find liability based on a violation of due process.

The Deshaney case, decided in 1989, remains the controlling law on the duty of government actors to protect citizens who fall prey to harm by third parties. While the law seems clear, there have been some cases where court’s have found that law enforcement agencies have breached a duty of care to person’s who have been injured or killed at the hands of third parties. These cases fall into two categories that are closely aligned, specifically the case involve those where law enforcement personnel have done something to enhance the danger to the third party or where law enforcement personnel have done something which has created the danger to the third party. Cases from several circuit courts provide a good example of how the courts are interpreting the law enforcement duty to protect.

Rivera v. City of Providence involved the murder of a witness. Jennifer Rivera, a fifteen year old, was a witness in the murder of Hector Feliciano, who was shot and killed on August 28, 1999. Jennifer had observed a notorious criminal, Charles Pona, flee the scene of the homicide. At the request of the police, Jennifer went to the police station and gave a witness statement. On August 31, 1999, Jennifer made a second trip to the police station at the request of the murder victim’s family and made a second witness statement in which she identified Charles Pona.

Jennifer’s testimony at a grand jury was helpful in indicting Charles Pona for the murder of Hector Feliciano. Jennifer also testified in preliminary hearings in which she was subjected to cross- examination by Pona’s counsel. According to her family, the testimony, which was given under the duress of police and prosecutors, led to numerous death threats. Jennifer’s family claimed that police and prosecutors were made aware of these threats and promised that Jennifer would be safe.

On May 21, 2000, Dennard Walker, Pona’s half-brother, stepped out of the shadows in front of Jennifer Rivera’s house and shot her in the head causing her death. Ironically, though Jennifer was not available to testify at trial, her testimony at the prior hearings that was subject to cross-examination was introduced and aided in the conviction of Charles Pona for the death of Hector Feliciano. Dennard Walker was convicted for the murder of Jennifer Rivera. Rivera’s family filed a lawsuit in federal court alleging that the prosecutors and police officers involved in the prosecution of Pona had failed to protect her from the harm caused by Pona.

The federal trial court dismissed the lawsuit after concluding that there was no duty on the part of law enforcement to protect Jennifer from harm even if the police were made aware of the threats and had promised some level of protection. That prompted an appeal to the United States Court of Appeal for the 1st Circuit.

The Court of Appeal began by recognizing the conclusions of the Supreme Court in Deshaney. “The Supreme Court has stated that as a general matter, ‘a State's failure to protect an individual against private violence simply does not constitute a violation of the Due Process Clause’….That is because the purpose of the Due Process Clause is to protect the people from the state, not to ensure that the state protects them from each other.” It was further recognized that law enforcement may have an obligation to protect persons from third party violence when there is a special relationship; however, citing Deshaney, the court noted that a special relationship is founded in a state depriving someone of the liberty to take care of themselves as with a prisoner. The court concluded that even if the police did make promises of protection and fail to keep those promises, they did nothing to restrain Jennifer’s liberty and thus there could be no liability based upon a duty to protect under the United States Constitution.

An opposite result may be reached when a person is being held in a jail or prison and suffers harm at the hands of a third party. In Merriweather v. Marion County, a federal trial court examined a lawsuit that resulted from assaults on a seventeen year-old in the Marion County Jail. The juvenile, Ryan Merriweather was sexually assaulted by several other inmates while in his cell. The assault which occurred over a forty-five minute period was halted as a guard approached. Ryan notified officials when he was removed for a court appearance, having been afraid to report the assault while still in the jail.

In evaluating the case, the court noted that Ryan would have to establish some level of notice of the propensity for violence by these other inmates. The jail had 15 documented incidents of violence by the inmates involved in the assault and Merriweather also alleged two other incidents of violence against inmates by these individuals. While the sheriff cited policies of constant rounds and the ability of inmates to use phones as cutting against liability, Merriweather argued that guards routinely violated these policies.

The court concluded that the one time that government officials have an obligation to protect persons from third party violence is when the person’s liberty is restrained and they are unable to care for themselves. The court asserted that Merriweather had alleged enough evidence that the Sheriff was on notice regarding violence in that area of the jail by citing the 15 documented incidents of violence involving the very same assailants. Further the court noted that Merriweather was assaulted a second time, although not sexually, in the presence of guards during recreation. Finally the court refused to dismiss the case against the sheriff since a jury could conclude that the sheriff was on notice and had failed to properly respond in protecting Ryan Merriweather from third party harm in the jail setting.

Key Point:

Government Actors have a greater duty to protect persons from third party violence when the person to be protected is in government custody and cannot protect themselves.

References:

DeShaney v. Winnebago County, 489 U.S. 189 (1989).
Rivera v. City of Providence, 402 F.3d 27 (1st Cir. 2005).
Merriweather v. Marion County, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS (Indiana Southern Dist. 2005).
 
this isn't

really legal or political so delete if you wish . but back when the dc snipers were shooting folks i remember seeing stafford county deputies at the gas stations near 95 using there cruisers as shields for those pumping gas.they would pull across sideways after a customer pulled in and sit in their car till you were done then pull out. and let next person in.that and images of cops and fireman running into the twin towers are what come to mind when i heare protect and serve.of course that would make me the retired criminal an apologist in the eyes of all the wronged computer consultants and assorted other keyboard "heroes of the revolution". but heck i'm sure they've had a host of horrendous interactions with police that i somehow avoided in my colorful career that spanned arrests in 5 states. funny how some folks luck is
 
The Court did note that when “the State takes a person into custody and holds him there against his will, the Constitution imposes on it a corresponding duty to assume some responsibility for his safety and general well-being…The affirmative duty to protect arises not from the State’s knowledge of the individual’s predicament or from its expressions of intent to help him, but from the limitation which it has imposed on his freedom to act on his own behalf.”

Depending on my caffeine and blood suger levels I go back and forth on this point.

By restricting my access to effective means of self-defense (weapons) the government is prima facia creating "a limitation on my freedom to act on my own behalf".

That's the point of many folks pointing out the 'no duty to protect" hypocrisy.

They don't want or expect the government to protect them, but they do want and expect the government to not actively deprive them of the ability to defend themselves.

As of now it appears gun-control proponant government agents want it both ways, no responsibility but no allowed freedom either.
 
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Interesting email, except for one point,

The question that is frequently asked is: Under what circumstances does the state or municipal entities have a constitutional duty to protect citizens from violence at the hands of private actors? The general answer to this question is that there is no constitutional duty to protect free citizens.

It becomes the duty of the State to protect the citizens when they take that right and ability away from the citizens themselves. THAT is what the 2nd amendment is all about!

Note: see Gun Free School Zones, NYC gun laws, and ANY other instances where citizens are prevented from carrying arms.
 
It becomes the duty of the State to protect the citizens when they take that right and ability away from the citizens themselves.

Exactly, and even the noted court cases would support that. If your in a gun free zone, and since guns are less restricted than many other weapons, likely a weapon free zone, and someone victimizes you or someone in a way that could have led to less harm or loss if the option of defence was available then those depriving you of the tools to protect are liable.

If the right is free to be excercised and someone could legaly have had the tools to provide for thier own defense and chose not to, then no, nobody other than the criminal victimizing the individual is liable.
 
In virtually every instance, "police protection" is one thing and one thing only, a LIE.

The one instance when I and friends of mine NEEDED police "protection", we were flatly refused that imaginary protection.

One need only read the book "Dial 911 and Die" to know the proof of the LIE.
 
When it comes to police matters, I like Ashton Dwyers take on the situation,"Treat me with benign neglect." :neener:


Guess that makes me a persona nonapologist.;)
 
In most cases it's completely impossible for the police to protect you. They would have to know before hand that a crime was going to occur and in most cases that's not possible. No matter what any piece of paper says a random crime is a random crime.

But when the law blocks your ability to protect yourself from that crime that is where government fails you. They knowingly and intentionally leave you in a position that you are easily victimized and provide no effective means of protection.
 
But when the law blocks your ability to protect yourself from that crime that is where government fails you. They knowingly and intentionally leave you in a position that you are easily victimized and provide no effective means of protection.

I could not agree with you more....The most sensible thing I have read in the political section...:eek:
 
See also Riss v. City of New York, 22 N.Y.2d 579 (1968)
there is no warrant in judicial tradition or in the proper allocation of the powers of government for the courts, in the absence of legislation, to carve out an area of tort liability for police protection to members of the public.
and Warren v. District of Columbia, 444 A.2d 1 (D.C.App. 1981)
The trial judges correctly dismissed both complaints. In a carefully reasoned Memorandum Opinion, Judge Hannon based his decision in No. 79-6 on "the fundamental principle that a government and its agents are under no general duty to provide public services, such as police protection, to any particular individual citizen." See p. 4, infra. The duty to provide public services is owed to the public at large, and, absent a special relationship between the police and an individual, no specific legal duty exists. Holding that no special relationship existed between the police and appellants in No. 79-6, Judge Hannon concluded that no specific legal duty existed. We hold that Judge Hannon was correct and adopt the relevant portions of his opinion. Those portions appear in the following Appendix.[fn1]
 
I can't imagine why anyone here at THR would get their knickers in a twist concerning LE Agencies protection and service or lack thereof for individual citizens. When they (LEO) can and do, it's awfully nice and professional of them. But when you or I are left to our own law-abiding day to day lives, that is, 99.9% of the time, even if it means dealing with ner-do-wells, hooligans or scaliwags... what's the problem?

I do agree, if I'm taken into custody for something (maliscious scaliwaggery perchance??) and I'm disarmed, cuffed and stuffed, it'd be nice to think that the chance of a Jack Ruby incident would be covered until I was processed... Jail cell time, I guess then I'm on my own while sitting on the group "W" bench.
But when the law blocks your ability to protect yourself from that crime that is where government fails you.
And that ain't the Cops fault. It's the rotten Vermicious Knids elected into office what causes most of those problems... that and all the Wangdoodles and Hornswogglers and Snozzwangers in the Justice system releasing real ner-do-wells, hooligans and scaliwags from their cages prematurely.
 
"International Law"

I am an ACLU member and got the latest newsletter. On page 2 was an article about how the ACLU is representing the Gonzales plaintiff from the Castle Rock v. Gonzalez case where a wife's restraining order failed to protect her kids from her estranged soon-to-be-ex husband. She sued claiming the police "did not enforce" the RO (and she lost).

The ACLU is somehow petitioning an "international law body" to get some sort of a ruling in Gonzalez' favor. I have no idea what they are trying to accomplish here, or what remedy they are trying to get.:scrutiny:

edited to add:
OK, I found it: http://www.aclu.org/pdfs/womensrights/gonzales_brief_20061211.pdf

Before the
INTER-AMERICAN COMMISSION ON HUMAN RIGHTS,
ORGANIZATION OF AMERICAN STATES

and in the table of contents:

III. THE LEGISLATIVE AND PROGRAMMATIC RESPONSE
OF THE UNITED STATES TO DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
DOES NOT GUARANTEE BASIC STANDARDS
OF PROTECTION TO ALL WOMEN AND CHILDREN.

and

THE UNITED STATES HAS AN AFFIRMATIVE
OBLIGATION TO PROTECT THE RIGHTS GUARANTEED
IN THE AMERICAN DECLARATION
FROM VIOLATION BY PRIVATE ACTORS.......................................................47
A. The United States Has an Affirmative Obligation
to Ensure the Fundamental Human Rights Expressed
in the American Declaration.............................................................................47
B. Violations Committed By Private Actors May Be Imputed
to the State Where It Failed to Take Reasonable Measures
Under the Circumstances to Prevent Criminal Acts. .....................................

I really apologize for hijacking the thread, but this might actually be relevant . . .
 
My reason for posting this, is that there are many pro Second Amendment and pro self defense arhuments you can make from these decisions. In the right venue you might (and it's a big might) be able to collect damages if you are injured in a victim disarmament zone.

There are also some good arguments to be made when talking to fence sitters on 2d Amendment issues. And good arguments to be made to your legislator the next time gun control legislation comes up.

Jeff
 
The fact that LEO has no specific duty to protect individuals is not a new thing. It has been an established fact for quite a while. Many have stated the obvious in that they do not expect protection on a personal level from LEO, they just want the government to stop disarming citizens thus preventing us from having a viable means of self defense. As has been pointed out it is not the fault of LEO that politicians pass laws that are blatantly prohibited by the Second Amendment and the judiciary either rubber stamps them or refuses to take them under review and vacate them. This is the reward Americans have reaped for electing people who make careers out of destroying our rights and getting fat rich and powerful in the process.


My only beef with LEO in regards to this subject is this. You hide behind the
legal rulings saying no rights exist at the individual level to expect protection, you say that you don't pass the laws banning firearms. But the simple truth is
when the guns get confiscated and citizens get arrested for owning a means of self defense in locales that prohibit private citizens from owning a means of self defense it is you, the badge wearers that are the ones doing the arresting and confiscating. That is why you bear the brunt of societies anger for this travesty. As long as LEO is willing to enforce bad laws, politicians will make bad laws.

Any police officer at any level of government who truly believes in the Second Amendment as it was written and intended by our founding fathers would honor the oath they took to defend and uphold the constitution. They would refuse to enforce laws that violated the Second Amendment. And for those officers who want to parrot " if a court has stated that the law is constitutional than it must be and I have to enforce it"
I ask this. If a law was passed telling you to round up for detention any and all person of _______ faith or any and all persons of________ race and
a judge said "its constitutional" would you do it? Just because a law says it's ok to do something and a judge doesn't have the morals or ethics to vacate that law does not make the law ethical, moral, right or constitutional.

Just following orders didn't work at MyLai, it didn't work at Nuremberg and it shouldn't work in America.
 
SIGH

I'm sorry I brought this up. I thought we could have a civil discussion of how we could use these decisions to further our cause.....I guess not :banghead:

Jeff
 
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