Federal Cop Accountability Nearly Impossible after Supreme Ct Border Patrol Case: Constitutional Rights don’t apply fully w/in 100 miles of US borders But 2/3 of the US population lives w/in the Zone
/From [HERE] Attorneys and civil rights advocates fear a new U.S. Supreme Court ruling will make it harder for people to sue federal law enforcement agents who violate their rights during warrantless searches.
On June 8, the court ruled against a man who had sued a U.S. Customs and Border Protection agent for excessive force, allegedly violating his Fourth and First Amendment rights.
Now, advocates say they worry, based on past Supreme Court cases, the 6-3 decision could be broadly applied to all federal agencies, not just border agents.
That could mean federal agents are protected from those lawsuits in nearly all of New England because the court has already held the Fourth Amendment doesn’t fully protect people against unreasonable searches and seizures within 100 miles of an international border or coastline.
Save for a southern chunk of Vermont and a small corner of northwestern Massachusetts, all of New England lies within the so-called 100-mile border enforcement zone due to the proximity to Canada and the Atlantic Ocean. About 210 million people — about two-thirds of the United States’ population — live within the zone nationwide, according to the American Civil Liberties Union.
“This case really has made it nearly impossible to hold (federal officials) accountable when there’s a Fourth Amendment violation or other constitutional violations,” said ACLU of Maine Legal Director Carol Garvan.
The Fourth Amendment protects people from unreasonable search and seizure by police and other government representatives. Typically, local and state law enforcement officers must obtain a warrant signed by a judge before conducting searches.
Attorneys and advocates are also concerned about the racial implications of the Supreme Court's June 8 ruling because of the disproportionate number of civil rights violations involving people of color in lawsuits against law enforcement officials at all levels.
"I do think that will be made worse by this ruling,” said Garvan.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection is the largest federal police agency in the country and employs nearly 20,000 agents. It, along with other immigration and national security agencies, has a track record of racial discrimination, according to a two-year investigation by Georgetown University Law Center.
What the Supreme Court's border enforcement ruling does and doesn't do
The Supreme Court ruled June 8 against a man who had sued a U.S. Customs and Border Protection agent for excessive force near Washington's border with Canada. The 6-3 decision in Egbert v. Boule blocked the man’s attempts to hold federal agents accountable for allegedly violating his Fourth and First Amendment rights.
The decision doesn’t alter federal agents’ unique authority within the 100-mile border enforcement zone, nor does it gut Fourth Amendment protections.
Instead, Egbert narrows the options American citizens have to hold federal agents accountable for their actions, according to legal experts who spoke to the USA TODAY Network.
Customs and Border Protection, Immigration and Customs Enforcement and U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services employees are authorized under 8 U.S. Code § 1357 to “board and search for aliens” without a warrant on any “railway car, aircraft, conveyance, or vehicle” within the 100-mile zone.
The law also allows border patrol to go onto private land, but not homes, within 25 miles of the border “for the purpose of patrolling the border to prevent the illegal entry of aliens into the United States.”
Americans may file civil rights lawsuits against state and local police under a Reconstruction-era federal law, but that law doesn’t apply to federal law enforcement. Claims against federal agencies are instead allowed under a Supreme Court precedent from 1971.
Lower courts have been divided since then on whether suits should be allowed against federal police in national security matters such as border patrols, among other circumstances. The debate bears similarities to debates surrounding qualified immunity, the legal doctrine that protects local police officers from liability for civil rights violations in many circumstances.
Under Egbert, federal agents would now be similarly immune unless the circumstances of the alleged violations in the 100-mile border zone match those of previously heard cases, Garvan argued.
“Unless your claim you’re bringing now is just like one of those previous cases, then you’re out of luck,” said the ACLU of Maine legal director.
What the Supreme Court justices wrote about protecting federal agents against civil rights suits
Associate Justice Clarence Thomas, writing for the 6-3 majority in the June 8 Egbert ruling, said Congress is better equipped than federal courts to authorize unreasonable search and seizure lawsuits against government employees.
Associate Justice Neil Gorsuch agreed in a concurring opinion.
"Weighing the costs and benefits of new laws is the bread and butter of legislative committees," Gorsuch wrote. "It has no place in federal courts charged with deciding cases and controversies under existing law.” [MORE]