Under the qualified immunity doctrine, current policy shields law enforcement officers who utilize excessive force against ordinary American citizens. As a result, police departments and enforcement officers lack incentives to change their behavior, leaving victims and grieving families powerless in the face of an unforgiving legal doctrine that provides little to no justice. This Note explores the creation and development of the qualified immunity doctrine within the policing context and argues that its near-impossible and unjust standards have been problematically overextended and drastically need reform by the Supreme Court. The countless lives lost at the hands of those who are meant to serve and protect are not in vain—they serve as th...
The two-pronged qualified immunity analysis, which is often the deciding point in any Fourth Amendme...
When determining whether to hold a police officer civilly liable for using excessive force in violat...
Qualified immunity has no perfect solution. On one hand, qualified immunity can prevent individuals ...
Under the qualified immunity doctrine, current policy shields law enforcement officers who utilize e...
Police brutality has captured public and political attention, garnering protests, investigations, an...
Qualified immunity has become a central target of the movement for police reform and racial justice ...
On the night of December 8, 2015, Nicholas Gilbert was pronounced dead following a tragic incident a...
If the Court did find an appropriate case to reconsider qualified immunity, and took seriously avail...
An officer is entitled to qualified immunity when a reasonable officer would not have known that her...
Section 1983 gives people the right to sue a government official for violating their constitutional ...
Before the 1989 case of Graham v. Connor, excessive force cases were pursued under either state law ...
George Floyd, an unarmed African American man, died after a white police officer kneeled on his neck...
Qualified immunity shields government officials from damages liability—even if they have violated pl...
This article addresses several criticisms of the qualified immunity doctrine and defends the doctrin...
We live in a time where recordings of misconduct and injustices are at high. We are capable of seein...
The two-pronged qualified immunity analysis, which is often the deciding point in any Fourth Amendme...
When determining whether to hold a police officer civilly liable for using excessive force in violat...
Qualified immunity has no perfect solution. On one hand, qualified immunity can prevent individuals ...
Under the qualified immunity doctrine, current policy shields law enforcement officers who utilize e...
Police brutality has captured public and political attention, garnering protests, investigations, an...
Qualified immunity has become a central target of the movement for police reform and racial justice ...
On the night of December 8, 2015, Nicholas Gilbert was pronounced dead following a tragic incident a...
If the Court did find an appropriate case to reconsider qualified immunity, and took seriously avail...
An officer is entitled to qualified immunity when a reasonable officer would not have known that her...
Section 1983 gives people the right to sue a government official for violating their constitutional ...
Before the 1989 case of Graham v. Connor, excessive force cases were pursued under either state law ...
George Floyd, an unarmed African American man, died after a white police officer kneeled on his neck...
Qualified immunity shields government officials from damages liability—even if they have violated pl...
This article addresses several criticisms of the qualified immunity doctrine and defends the doctrin...
We live in a time where recordings of misconduct and injustices are at high. We are capable of seein...
The two-pronged qualified immunity analysis, which is often the deciding point in any Fourth Amendme...
When determining whether to hold a police officer civilly liable for using excessive force in violat...
Qualified immunity has no perfect solution. On one hand, qualified immunity can prevent individuals ...