Barnes v. Felix and the “moment of threat”

Barnes v. Felix and the “moment of threat”

At issue is whether officers’ use of fatal force should be judged only at the “moment-of-threat.” Generally, for most other issues — such as probable cause (for search or arrest) and reasonable suspicion (for stop or frisk) — the court uses “totality of the circumstances.” You build a case, in effect, before making a decision. And generally for use-of-force issues, “objectively reasonable” (from the perspective of another police officer at the scene) is the standard. All right and good.

But “moment-of-threat” has always struck me as weird. Because a cop can screw everything up, create a threat even, but then a shooting is OK because there really is a threat at the “moment” the cop pulls the trigger? OK. This was an issue on the 2014 shooting of Tamir Rice in Cleveland, the kid with a replica gun. It was a horrible policing. But the kid was holding a replica gun thus the at the moment of threat the shooting was justified and reasonable. But it shouldn’t have been.

Puts me in a bad situation when I am seen as “defending” the cops because I know what the rules are, even when I also think the shooting is horrible. But I don’t make the rules. The Court does.

Under the “moment-of-threat” concept, events “leading up to the shooting” are “not relevant.” Don’t blame me for pointing out what Court’s says the is constitutional! (Ed note: They blame me.)

Anyway, the court just changed their mind about this.

The new Law of the Land say: “A court deciding a use-of-force case cannot review the totality of the circumstances if it has put on chronological blinders.” And “A court cannot thus ‘narrow’ the totality-of-the-circumstances inquiry, to focus on only a single moment.”

This seems eminently reasonable.

I applaud this decision.

https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/24pdf/23-1239_onjq.pdf
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