I Want to Sue the Police for Arresting Me Again Do I Have a Right to Sue Them and Go to Trial

Afalse arrest is adetention thatunlawfully restrainsthe victim'sliberty. Bothpolice andprivate citizens can be held liable for making a false arrest. Police can be sued formonetary damages by the victim in acivil rights lawsuit. When police have illegally arrested someone, the victim can also file a complaint with the police department. If charged with a crime, the victim can also ask a court toexclude whatever evidence was discovered by way of the arrest.

A false arrest victim on the ground. He may be able to sue the officer.

People can sue for detention that unlawfully restrains their liberty.

1. What is an arrest?

Anarrest requires 3 things:

  1. an intentional deprivation of someone else's freedom of movement,
  2. that deprivation compels the victim to go somewhere or to stay somewhere for an appreciable time, and
  3. the deprivation was not consensual.1

Most of the time, arrests are conducted bypolice officers. However, there are times when private citizens initiate arrests (citizen's arrest), such as security guards.

Example: A store clerk detains a suspect for shoplifting.

The use of force is not necessary to initiate an arrest. Arrests can involve anything that compels the victim's movement. This includes:

  • force,
  • threats,
  • duress,
  • fraud, or
  • deceit.2

If the arrest involves confinement or physical restraint, it does not have to be complete restraint. Victims do not have to be locked in a room with no possibility of escape.3 They do not even need to be aware of their lack of liberty at the time of the confinement.4

2. What is a false arrest?

Similar to unlawful detention, falsely arresting someone is restraining someone without legal justification. Arresting can be unlawful if the arrestor had no legal authority to do so.

Law enforcement officers do not have the legal right to make arrests on a whim. They must have probable cause or awarrant to arrest someone lawfully.

Arresting can be lawful when it begins, but becomes unlawful as it progresses.

Example: A police officer pulls a car over for a broken taillight. After writing the ticket, the officer tells the driver that they are not allowed to leave until a drug-sniffing dog arrives. This is a false arrest case because there is unlawful restraint on the driver's freedom.

The term false arrest is often used interchangeably with false imprisonment. One is just one way of committing the other. Some false arrests occur with police brutality, and some do not.5

Man on ground during a false arrest. He may be able to bring a lawsuit against the officer.

The act of police arresting someone can be unlawful even if they have a warrant.

3. Can there be a false arrest if there is a warrant?

An arrest made by a police officercan be unlawful, even if there was awarrant. Arresting can be unlawful if the warrant was invalid.

An arrest warrant can be invalid if:

  • it does not name or adequately identify the person to be arrested,
  • it does not specify the crime for which the person is being arrested,
  • it does not say what court issued the warrant, or
  • police lied to a judge to prove they had probable cause for the arrest.

False statements by police have to be integral to the finding of probable cause to invalidate a warrant. If the judge could have found there was probable cause without the false statements, the warrant is still valid.6

Not all invalid warrants lead to wrongful arresting, however. The arresting officer can defend against a false arrest claim by arguing that he or she was acting in good faith. An officer can prove a good faith defense by showing that:

  • the warrant appeared to be valid,
  • the officer believed the warrant was valid, and
  • the officer had a reasonable belief that the warrant was for the person who was arrested.7

4. What are unlawful and warrantless arrests?

Police are allowed to make warrantless arrests. But these arrests must be supported byprobable cause. If a police officer did not have sufficient probable cause, the arrest wasunlawful. Once the victim shows that he/she was arrested without a warrant, the officer has to prove that there was probable cause.8

Police can prove that they had probable cause if:

  • the suspect commits a crime in the officer's presence, or
  • the officer had reasonable cause to believe that the suspect had committed a felony.9

The officer's belief is informed by what the officer knew, at the time of the arrest.10

5. What remedies are there for a victim?

Victims of a false arrest have 4 legal options that they can pursue:

  1. acomplaint against the arresting officer with the police department,
  2. a motion to suppress whatever evidence was obtained from the false arrest,
  3. a lawsuit against the officer and department, demanding aninjunction, and
  4. a  lawsuit against the officer and department, demandingmonetary damages.

By filing acomplaint with the police department, a victim can demand the officer face repercussions for their false arrest. In the most egregious cases, the officer could get fired. He or she could also be suspended or retrained. In California, an officer could face criminal charges under Penal Code 118.1 PC or other statutes.

If the victim was charged with a crime, he or she can file amotion to exclude evidence obtained from the false arrest. This motion is filed with the court in the victim's criminal case. Any criminal evidence found because of the arrest can get thrown out.

Victims can also file a false arrest lawsuit against the officer and the police department for civil rights violations. That lawsuit can be filed in state or federal court in the United States. If it is filed in federal court, it would likely be a 1983 civil rights lawsuit pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983.

Civil lawsuits face the challenge that officers may be protected by qualified immunity.

The false arrest lawsuit can demand aninjunction, which is a court order. If successful, the court can require the police department to:

  • retrain officers,
  • change their official policies for arresting, or
  • fire the offending officer.

The lawsuit can also demandmonetary damages. Those damages would aim to compensate the victim for false imprisonment. A personal injury attorney can help win compensation to cover:

  • medical bills,
  • wages lost,
  • pain and suffering (mental distress), and
  • the violation of the victim's civil rights, also known as presumed damages.

However, recovering monetary damages – particularly punitive damages – is difficult. Victims have to overcome the qualified immunity defense. This defense shields government officials, including police officers, from lawsuits filed over conduct done while on duty.

6. What is the law in California?

In order to prevail on a California claim or lawsuit for false arrest, the plaintiff (victim) would need to prove the following elements:

  1. The defendant (police officer) arrested the plaintiff without a warrant or with an invalid warrant;
  2. The plaintiff was actually harmed; and
  3. The defendant's conduct was a substantial factor causing the plaintiff's harm.11

Once a plaintiff alleges that the defendant arrested him/her without legal process, the burden rests on the defendant to justify the lawfulness of the arrest.12 Common defenses that defendants raise are that they had probable cause to make an arrest, or that they had a good faith belief that the arrest warrant was valid.13

Defendants will likely claim that qualified immunity protects them from false arrest lawsuits, though the statute is unclear whether qualified immunity applies to false arrests.14 But as long as plaintiffs can show that defendants violated a clear constitutional right, qualified immunity does not apply – and the defendants can be sued.15

Plaintiffs bringing a false arrest lawsuit in California can sue for monetary damages to cover the costs of any medical bills, lost wages, pain and suffering, emotional distress, and any other out-of-pocket costs. In most cases involving police officers, their police department pays any civil damages.16


Legal References:

shepherdtharter.blogspot.com

Source: https://www.shouselaw.com/ca/civil-rights/false-arrest/

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