WARNING: There’s foul language in this report.
False charges, financial damages, property destroyed. No recourse! Or is there? Retweet
NOTE: This message is being sent out by DownsizeDC.org, Inc. on behalf of our partner the Downsize DC Foundation.
We want to file a Supreme Court amicus brief in the case Manuel v. City of Joliet. Here’s what’s at stake…
- If police conduct an unlawful search and seizure leading to a false arrest based on lies and fabricated police reports, including falsified testimony before a Grand Jury, and…
- If that false arrest expands to become an unlawful detention that lasts for seven weeks, resulting in lost income, ruined credit, and other costs to the victim…
Can that victim sue the police for a violation of his Fourth Amendment rights?
State courts have denied any remedy to Manuel because of a statute of limitations defense. So Manuel filed a lawsuit in federal court alleging violation of the Fourth Amendment. The U.S. Supreme Court has said that it wants to review this issue. We want to help this man — but more importantly, defend the principle that states cannot make everything better just by dropping charges that should have never been brought.
Imagine how you would feel if this happened to you…
Two Joliet cops stopped a car for turning without signaling in the early hours of March 18, 2011. The car’s owner, Elijah Manuel, was in the passenger seat. One of the cops pulled him out of the car and forced him to the ground, shouting “You remember me: I got you now you fucking nigger.”
Four more cops arrived. They searched the car, ripping up the floor mats and slashing the steering wheel. Manuel was also searched and cuffed. They found a bottle of vitamins and field tested them. They were not drugs.
The cops lied about the results, saying the pills tested positive for ecstasy. They arrested Manuel. The vitamins failed another drug test at the station. Instead of releasing Manuel, the police further falsified their report. They also claimed Manuel made furtive moves and smelled like “burnt cannabis.”
An independent lab ruled that the pills were not drugs on April 1, 2011, but the police continued to hold Manuel. He wasn’t arraigned until April 8, and was only released, with the charges dismissed, on May 4, 2011. Meanwhile…
Manuel couldn’t work or attend college. He was forced to drop his classes, for which he still had to pay. He defaulted on bills, ruining his credit rating.
Manuel sought damages from the city on April 10, 2013. His claims were futile because of a short state statute of limitations. But Manuel also filed a malicious prosecution claim in federal court based on a violation of the Fourth Amendment, which was still timely because the claim did not arise until he was released on May 4, 2011. But the court ruled that it was bound by Seventh Circuit precedent to find that…
“Federal claims of malicious prosecution are founded on the right to due process, not the Fourth Amendment, and thus there is no malicious prosecution claim under federal law if, as here, state law provides a similar cause of action.”
In other words, since Manuel’s prosecution was never completed, he cannot claim malicious prosecution.
Is this a winnable case?
As Manuel points out in his petition for Supreme Court review, only the Seventh Circuit views things this way. All other Circuits who have ruled on the matter have determined that the Constitution protects against pretrial detention without probable cause for the period up to dismissal of the charges.
Would you like to see someone make these two arguments in support of Manuel?
- Detentions require probable cause, just as much as arrests. There was no probable cause justification to hold Manuel for seven weeks.
- The Fourth Amendment places great emphasis on self-ownership. The police violated Manuel’s self-ownership. There was no privacy issue involved, so this gives us a great opportunity to expand on our previous victory in the Jones case, where we re-established the property rights basis of the 4th Amendment. Remember, we are the primary group that has advocated in the Supreme Court every person has a property right in his own person.
We want to file an amicus brief on Manuel’s behalf. The U.S. Supreme Court has accepted his case for review. Can you help us fund this work?
You can make a contribution, to the Downsize DC Foundation, for that purpose. We’re using the secure online page of the Zero Aggression Project.
- We have a funding target of $2,500 which will require at least one donor to give $500, if not $1,000, otherwise we may not meet it.
- In addition, we will need a lot of contributions of various sizes. Monthly, credit card pledges are especially helpful.
Your contribution to the Downsize DC Foundation will be tax deductible if you itemize deductions on your return.
Thank you in advance for any assistance you can provide,
Jim Babka, President
Downsize DC Foundation
& DownsizeDC.org, Inc.