AG Alan Wilson Joins Multistate Coalition Urging Supreme Court to Allow Police Officers to Act to Protect Public Safety
Staff Report From South Carolina CEO
Wednesday, August 29th, 2018
Attorney General Alan Wilson joined a coalition of 15 states and the District of Columbia in filing a brief urging the United States Supreme Court to protect police from frivolous claims of false arrest. The brief urges the Court to overrule a lower court and hold that a police officer is not subject to a retaliatory-arrest suit when the officer had probable cause to make the arrest. The brief explains that a contrary ruling would constrain officers’ ability to protect the public, including through community policing.
“Police officers have a hard enough job without having to worry about being sued for arresting someone when there’s probable cause to make that arrest,” Attorney General Wilson said. “We’re urging the Supreme Court to overturn this lower court ruling because not doing so would make all of us less safe.”
“Police officers must be able to make swift decisions about arresting individuals when they have probable cause,” said District of Columbia Attorney General Karl A. Racine, who led the multistate brief. “This broad, bipartisan coalition recognizes that after-the-fact First Amendment claims should not limit an officer’s ability to make crucial split-second determinations in the interest of public safety.”
The multistate amicus brief comes in Nieves v. Bartlett, a case in which a man sued two Alaska state troopers who had arrested him for disorderly conduct. Although there was probable cause for the arrest, the arrestee sued, claiming that the troopers were retaliating against the exercise of his First Amendment rights. The Court must decide whether a plaintiff may sue police officers for retaliatory arrest if the officer had probable cause to arrest the plaintiff. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit ruled in favor of the arrestee, and the officers appealed the decision to the Supreme Court.
The states’ brief argues that a decision upholding the 9th Circuit would inhibit effective policing and encourage a flood of lawsuits claiming retaliatory arrest. This would chill the willingness of officers to make arrests, even when based on probable cause and when necessary to protect the public safety. Acknowledging the importance of the First Amendment interests at stake, the brief also contends that the states and the District have effective administrative and disciplinary procedures in place, including civilian complaint review boards, to address misconduct by officers and to protect those interests.
The Court will hear oral arguments in the case in its next term, which begins in October 2018.