officer liability. the seven most common areas of officer liability failure to protect a citizen ...
TRANSCRIPT
The Seven Most Common Areas of Officer Liability
Failure to protect a citizen
Failure to enforce a court order
Failure to respond in a timely manner
Failure to provide information to a victim
Arresting without probable cause
Exhibiting a pattern of differential treatment
Inadequately trained officers.
Officer Liability
In 1996 and 2006 the Illinois Supreme Court
ruled an officer can be held liable for money
damages if the officer fails to act to protect
victim of domestic violence.
Lawsuits for Failing to Adequately Train Officers
City of Canton, Ohio vs. Harris (109 S. Ct. 1197 (1989))
Ricketts vs. Columbia (No. 90-4099-CV-C66BA (US Dist. Ct. W.D. Mo))
Police Liability in IDVA (1)(750 ILCS 60/305)
Any act of omission or commission by any law enforcement officer acting in good faith in rendering emergency assistance or otherwise enforcing this Act shall not impose civil liability upon the law enforcement officer or his or her supervisor or employer, unless the act is a result of willful or wanton misconduct.
IDVA Policy Liability (2)
Willful or wanton conduct is defined as “action” which if not intentional, shows an utter indifference to or conscious disregard for “the safety of oneself or others”.
Castle Rock v. Gonzalez
125 S. Ct. 2796 (2005)
Special Duty related to the IDVA
Domestic violence legislation and special victim legislation creates an exception to old rules – creates a special duty.
Calloway v. Kinkelaar168 Ill 2d 312 (1995)
How Can We Reduce the Potential Exposure
to Lawsuits? (1) Review policy
Adopt a legal policy
Monitor compliance
Review actions/reports
Provide training
How Can We Reduce the Potential Exposure
to Lawsuits? (2) Relevant laws
New legislation = policy changes
Document DV arrests/homicides.
Impact of a PositiveLaw Enforcement Response (2)
Domestic violence is a crime
Holds batterers accountable
Supports the victim
Coordinated community response
The Meaning of “SHALL” If you do not comply, you’re not following
the law.
If you are not following the law, you are not covered by immunity.
If you are not immune, you are susceptible to law suits.
You MUST do it!
Mandatory/Pro Arrest
An officer SHALL arrest predominant physical aggressor if there is probable cause.
What is Probable Cause?
“The combination of facts & circumstances that leads a law enforcement officer to believe
that a crime has been committed.”
What Do You NOT Consider in the Arrest Decision? (1)
Claims that victim provoked the violence
Mental health of victim or suspect
Verbal assurances that violence will stop
Ownership/tenancy rights of shared residence
DO NOT Consider in the Arrest Decision (2)
Drug or alcohol use
Denial of abuse
Uncooperative victim
Marital/Financial status of the parties involved
Exigent Circumstances (2)
Good faith basis to search a house to look for a victim/suspect, protects
you from liability
If a victim is bleeding to death in a room of a house where you were on the scene and did not locate
her … hire a lawyer!
Training Exercise 2
Handling the Call:
Domestic Violence Vignettes
Stalking Scenario
“Everywhere I Go There He Is –
Am I Losing My Mind?”
Acknowledgements
Resources provided by:- Mark Wynn, Wynn Consulting –
www.markwynn.com
- 4th Judicial Circuit FVCC Law Enforcement Committee
- OVW Rural Grant Committee, 4th Judicial Circuit
- Law Enforcement Resource Center & Minnesota Program Development, Inc., 2000
This project was supported by Grant #2011-WE-AX-0055, awarded by the Office on Violence Against Women, U.S. Department of Justice, through the Illinois Violence Prevention Authority.
The original project was supported by Grant # 2008-WR-AX-0016, awarded by the Office on Violence Against Women, U.S. Department of Justice, through the Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority.
Points of view, opinions, findings, conclusions or recommendations contained within this document are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the official position or policies of the U.S. Department of Justice, Office on Violence Against Women, Illinois Violence Prevention Authority, or the Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority.