OFF THE WIRE
http://youtu.be/qAyRqVeFpvg
nowing your Constitutional and other Legal Rights is the key to
protection of the innocent. There are other rights, in dealing with
police, that are little known.
Your display of these rights may help or harm your dealings with police....
Cops may have no duty to Protect you from Harm: http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/28/pol... .....
But you do have the right to know the salary of public servants
Utah: www.utahsright.com
Justices Rule Police Do Not Have a Constitutional Duty to Protect Someone..
By LINDA GREENHOUSE
WASHINGTON, June 27 - The Supreme Court ruled on Monday that the
police did not have a constitutional duty to protect a person from harm,
even a woman who had obtained a court-issued protective order against a
violent husband making an arrest mandatory for a violation.
The decision, with an opinion by Justice Antonin Scalia and dissents
from Justices John Paul Stevens and Ruth Bader Ginsburg, overturned a
ruling by a federal appeals court in Colorado. The appeals court had
permitted a lawsuit to proceed against a Colorado town, Castle Rock, for
the failure of the police to respond to a woman's pleas for help after
her estranged husband violated a protective order by kidnapping their
three young daughters, whom he eventually killed.
For hours on the
night of June 22, 1999, Jessica Gonzales tried to get the Castle Rock
police to find and arrest her estranged husband, Simon Gonzales, who was
under a court order to stay 100 yards away from the house. He had taken
the children, ages 7, 9 and 10, as they played outside, and he later
called his wife to tell her that he had the girls at an amusement park
in Denver.
Ms. Gonzales conveyed the information to the police,
but they failed to act before Mr. Gonzales arrived at the police station
hours later, firing a gun, with the bodies of the girls in the back of
his truck. The police killed him at the scene.
The theory of the
lawsuit Ms. Gonzales filed in federal district court in Denver was that
Colorado law had given her an enforceable right to protection by
instructing the police, on the court order, that "you shall arrest" or
issue a warrant for the arrest of a violator. She argued that the order
gave her a "property interest" within the meaning of the 14th
Amendment's due process guarantee, which prohibits the deprivation of
property without due process.
The district court and a panel of
the United States Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit dismissed the
suit, but the full appeals court reinstated it and the town appealed.
The Supreme Court's precedents made the appellate ruling a challenging
one for Ms. Gonzales and her lawyers to sustain.
A 1989 decision,
DeShaney v. Winnebago County, held that the failure by county social
service workers to protect a young boy from a beating by his father did
not breach any substantive constitutional duty. By framing her case as
one of process rather than substance, Ms. Gonzales and her lawyers hoped
to find a way around that precedent.
But the majority on Monday
saw little difference between the earlier case and this one, Castle Rock
v. Gonzales, No. 04-278. Ms. Gonzales did not have a "property
interest" in enforcing the restraining order, Justice Scalia said,
adding that "such a right would not, of course, resemble any traditional
conception of property."
Although the protective order did
mandate an arrest, or an arrest warrant, in so many words, Justice
Scalia said, "a well-established tradition of police discretion has long
coexisted with apparently mandatory arrest statutes."
But
Justices Stevens and Ginsburg, in their dissenting opinion, said "it is
clear that the elimination of police discretion was integral to Colorado
and its fellow states' solution to the problem of underenforcement in
domestic violence cases." Colorado was one of two dozen states that, in
response to increased attention to the problem of domestic violence
during the 1990's, made arrest mandatory for violating protective
orders.
"The court fails to come to terms with the wave of
domestic violence statutes that provides the crucial context for
understanding Colorado's law," the dissenting justices said.
Organizations
concerned with domestic violence had watched the case closely and
expressed disappointment at the outcome. Fernando LaGuarda, counsel for
the National Network to End Domestic Violence, said in a statement that
Congress and the states should now act to give greater protection.
In
another ruling on Monday, the court rebuked the United States Court of
Appeals for the Sixth Circuit, in Cincinnati, for having reopened a
death penalty appeal, on the basis of newly discovered evidence, after
the ruling had become final.
The 5-to-4 decision, Bell v.
Thompson, No. 04-514, came in response to an appeal by the State of
Tennessee after the Sixth Circuit removed a convicted murderer, Gregory
Thompson, from the state's death row.
After his conviction and the
failure of his appeals in state court, Mr. Thompson, with new lawyers,
had gone to federal district court seeking a writ of habeas corpus on
the ground that his initial lawyers had been constitutionally
inadequate. The new lawyers obtained a consultation with a psychologist,
who diagnosed Mr. Thompson as schizophrenic.
But the
psychologist's report was not included in the file of the habeas corpus
petition in district court, which denied the petition. It was not until
the Sixth Circuit and then the Supreme Court had also denied his
petition, making the case final, that the Sixth Circuit reopened the
case, finding that the report was crucial evidence that should have been
considered.
In overturning that ruling in an opinion by Justice
Anthony M. Kennedy, the majority said the appeals court had abused its
discretion in an "extraordinary departure from standard appellate
procedures." Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist and Justices Scalia,
Clarence Thomas and Sandra Day O'Connor joined the opinion.
In a
dissenting opinion, Justice Stephen G. Breyer said the majority had
relied on rules to the exclusion of justice. Judges need a "degree of
discretion, thereby providing oil for the rule-based gears," he said.
Justices Stevens, Ginsburg and David H. Souter joined the dissent.