Verified Document

When The Police Duty To Protect Fails: Police Brutality Essay

Doctrines of Duty Care Failure Protecting Laws on Vehicular Pursuits and Police Brutality Title 42, Section 1983 of the United States Code, or the federal civil rights statute, officials of the state and local governments may be sued in they violate an individual's constitutional rights, such as the Fourth Amendment (Batterton, 2015; Dean, 1998; Rutledge, 2010). This amendment explicitly protects an individual from unreasonable arrest and seizure. It is often invoked when a police officer makes the unreasonable arrest or seizure. The complainant may take this course of action, imploring the Fifth and 14th amendments due process clause under one of two doctrines, namely the special relationship doctrine and the state-created doctrine (Batterton, Dean, Rutledge).

The Special Relationship Liability Doctrine

Under this doctrine, the state takes control of a person by way of an affirmative duty to protect him (Batterton, 2015; Dean, 1998; Rutledge, 2010). Examples of recipients of this protection are prisoners and involuntary controlled mental patients. Custody over such a person entails responsibility to take reasonable measures to extend appropriate care to him or her and protection from all probable risks. This doctrine is often invoked...

If a police officer, for example, arrests a probable violator and takes him inside the patrol car but fails to provide him with a seat belt, the police officer and his agency can be sued if the arrested person incurs injuries in transport. The police officer is required to protect him and thus violates his affirmative duty. It is a violation of due process (Batterton, Dean, Rutledge).
State-Created Danger Liability Doctrine

This is the more commonly invoked doctrine of the two. It may be applicable if a person who is not in police custody but incurs some injury or dies from a hazard or as the result of an act performed by the police officer or the failure to perform a protective act. While the failure to protect a person against private harm does not generally breaches the constitutional guarantee of due process, a violation can occur when the action performed affirmatively puts the person in a situation of danger. In that situation, the police or state action exposes or creates a situation of danger, which he or she would otherwise not confront if it were not for the police or state action. Simply stated, if the police or state action puts the person in…

Sources used in this document:
BIBLIOGRAPHY

Batterton, B.S. (2015). Motor vehicle pursuit liability. Public Agency Training Council.

Retrieved on July 31, 2015 from http://www.patc.com/weeklyarticles/vehicle-pursuit-liability.shtml

Dean, M.A. (1998). The failure of law enforcement to enforce the law. Mdean: Tripod.

Retrieved on July 31, 2015 from http://mcdean.tripod.com/immunity.html
Rutledge, D. (2010). Liability for failure to protect. Police Patrol: Police Magazine. Retrieved on July 31, 2015 from http://www.policemag.com/channel/patrol/articles/2010/06/liability
Cite this Document:
Copy Bibliography Citation

Related Documents

Police Deviance and Integrity in
Words: 1631 Length: 6 Document Type: Research Paper

This is when they will abide by these guidelines. The enforcement of these provisions will create a procedure for investigating offenses, protecting the rights of the accused and punishing those who violate the code of ethics. ("Police Officer Code of Ethics," 2004) (Berg, 1999) What makes this approach so unique is the department will function as an independent entity. This means that Internal Affairs will have the power to overrule

Reducing Citizen Complaints a Growing
Words: 3696 Length: 10 Document Type: Essay

G. A Police Office in a large metropolitan area like New York will have different duties and dangers than a County Sheriff in a rural Oklahoma area) (Barlow, 2000). Rightly so, modern society has a certain level of expectations for its military and law enforcement branches. While it is known that both must, at times, deal with the underside of society, it is also assumed that the group will rise above

Crime Film Genre and the
Words: 2958 Length: 9 Document Type: Essay

Miller's Crossing gives the best example of the "ethics" of the crime film genre -- beginning as it does with the classic speech delivered by Giovanni Gasparo: "I'm talkin' about friendship -- I'm talkin' about character -- I'm talkin' about -- hell, Leo, I ain't embarrassed to use the word: I'm talkin' about ethics…" The film, of course, is full of characters whose actions are shady and unethical -- but

Sign Up for Unlimited Study Help

Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.

Get Started Now