The Law on Police Use of Force in the United States

被引:2
作者
Garrett, Brandon [1 ,2 ]
Slobogin, Christopher [3 ,4 ]
机构
[1] Duke Univ, Sch Law, Law, Durham, NC 27706 USA
[2] Duke Univ, Sch Law, Wilson Ctr Sci & Justice, Durham, NC 27706 USA
[3] Vanderbilt Univ, Law, 221 Kirkland Hall, Nashville, TN 37235 USA
[4] Vanderbilt Univ, Criminal Justice Program, 221 Kirkland Hall, Nashville, TN 37235 USA
来源
GERMAN LAW JOURNAL | 2020年 / 21卷 / 08期
关键词
Policing; deadly force; arrests; stop and frisk; exclusionary rule; qualified immunity; consent decrees; COURT; BLACK;
D O I
10.1017/glj.2020.92
中图分类号
D9 [法律]; DF [法律];
学科分类号
0301 ;
摘要
Recent events in the United States have highlighted the fact that American police resort to force, including deadly force, much more often than in many other Western countries. This Article describes how the current regulatory regime may ignore or even facilitate these aggressive police actions. The law governing police use of force in the United States derives in large part from the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution, which prohibits unreasonable searches and seizures. As construed by the United States Supreme Court, the Fourth Amendment provides police wide leeway in using deadly force, making custodial arrests, and stopping and frisking individuals. While state and local police departments can develop more restrictive rules, they often do not. Additionally, the remedies for violations of these rules are weak. The predominant remedy is exclusion of evidence, the impact of which falls primarily on the prosecutor and in any event only has a deterrent effect when evidence is sought. Civil and criminal sanctions have been significantly limited by the Supreme Court, particularly through the doctrine of qualified immunity (applied to individual officers) and the policy or custom defense (applied to municipalities). This minimal regulatory regime is one reason police-citizen encounters in the United States so often result in death or serious bodily harm to citizens, in particular those who are Black. The Article ends with a number of reform proposals.
引用
收藏
页码:1526 / 1540
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Dispatch Priming and the Police Decision to Use Deadly Force
    Taylor, Paul L.
    [J]. POLICE QUARTERLY, 2020, 23 (03) : 311 - 332
  • [22] Examining the sources of police use of force in South Korea
    Yim, Ha-neul
    Riddell, Jordan R.
    Lee, Yung Hyeock
    [J]. JOURNAL OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE, 2025, 96
  • [23] Examining police use of force: a smaller agency perspective
    Terrill, William
    Leinfelt, Fredrik H.
    Kwak, Dae-Hoon
    [J]. POLICING-AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF POLICE STRATEGIES & MANAGEMENT, 2008, 31 (01) : 57 - 76
  • [24] Striking Out: Race and Support for Police Use of Force
    Johnson, Devon
    Kuhns, Joseph B.
    [J]. JUSTICE QUARTERLY, 2009, 26 (03) : 592 - 623
  • [25] Who Believes that the Police Use Excessive Force? Centering Racism in Research on Perceptions of the Police
    Drakulich, Kevin
    Robles, Jesenia
    Rodriguez-Whitney, Eric
    Pereira, Cassidy
    [J]. JOURNAL OF RESEARCH IN CRIME AND DELINQUENCY, 2023, 60 (01) : 112 - 164
  • [26] SHOT: Developing a Database for Police Shooting Incidents in the United States
    Arslan, Hasan
    Farkas, Dan
    [J]. 2015 Internet Technologies and Applications (ITA) Proceedings of the Sixth International Conference (ITA 15), 2015, : 85 - 90
  • [27] Underreporting of Homicides by Police in the United States, 1976-2013
    Loftin, Colin
    McDowall, David
    Xie, Min
    [J]. HOMICIDE STUDIES, 2017, 21 (02) : 159 - 174
  • [28] Race, Political Ideology, and Support for Defunding the Police in the United States
    Aitalieva, Nurgul R.
    Harding, Lauren Howard
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION, 2024,
  • [29] REFORMING THE LAW ON POLICE USE OF DEADLY FORCE: DE-ESCALATION, PRESEIZURE CONDUCT, AND IMPERFECT SELF-DEFENSE
    Lee, Cynthia
    [J]. UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS LAW REVIEW, 2018, (02): : 629 - 691
  • [30] Understanding Racial Disparities in Police Use of Lethal Force: Lessons from Fatal Police-on-Police Shootings
    Charbonneau, Amanda
    Spencer, Katherine
    Glaser, Jack
    [J]. JOURNAL OF SOCIAL ISSUES, 2017, 73 (04) : 744 - 767