Qualified immunity is a judicial doctrine that protects public officials from liability when they violate people’s constitutional rights, unless those rights were “clearly established” at the time of their violation. Since the Supreme Court invented this “clearly established law” standard in 1982, it has issued 32 qualified immunity decisions, and only twice found that a defendant’s conduct actually violated “clearly established law” (and these two cases were decided nearly two decades ago). Thus, the practical effect of the Court’s decisions has been to make “clearly established law” more and more difficult for plaintiffs to show; today, many lower courts effectively require plaintiffs to find a prior case with nearly identical facts before they will hold that the law was clearly established.
But this morning, for the first time in sixteen years, the Supreme Court issued a qualified immunity decision in which it held that the defendants’ actions violated “clearly established law.” The case is Taylor v. Riojas, in which the Fifth Circuit upheld a grant of immunity to prison officials who subjected Trent Taylor to horrific and inhumane prison conditions. Taylor was kept for several days in a cell that was covered floor to ceiling with the feces of the previous occupant, and where feces was packed into the water faucets, preventing him from drinking. He was then moved to a second cell, which was kept at freezing temperatures, and where a clogged drain on the floor caused raw sewage to flood the cell, forcing him to sleep in sewage. The prison officials were well aware of these conditions, and at one point laughed that Taylor was “going to have a long weekend.” Notwithstanding this obviously inhumane treatment, the Fifth Circuit granted immunity to these officials, because while “the law was clear that prisoners couldn’t be housed in cells teeming with human waste for months on end,” it had not previously held that confinement in human waste for six days violated the Constitution.
Read more at https://www.cato.org/blog/scotus-decides-inhuman-treatment-prisoner-violated-clearly-established-law
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