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mrsat_98
05-21-2014, 06:59 AM
US Supreme Court Rules Government Officers Liable (http://private-person.com/blog/2014/05/us-supreme-court-rules-government-officers-liable/)

One of the legal fantasies promoted by governments and officials is the idea of ‘sovereign immunity’… where they are not liable for their corrupt and illegal actions.

Unfortunately this lie of ‘sovereign immunity’ is also repeated unknowingly by people who have a real case against government officials and therefore do not pursue very valid claims.

A recent US Supreme Court decision clarified and confirmed that the government and their agents can be held liable and accountable for wrongdoing carried out by officials in its employment while on the job.

This should be a a no brainer but in the land of legal fictions and unaccountable government officials being protected by legal process…someone FINALLY took the issue to the US Supreme Court for a common sense confirmation which lower level courts are now bound by.

This is a fundamental principle of law that nobody is above the law including all government actors. The government immunity clause only applies to government actors when they are performing their actions of their office defined by their office in good faith.

Any actions that they take not defined by their office or illegal by their nature are considered have been done outside of their office therefore done in their private capacity and therefore they are fully liable in their private capacity without any protections of their office.

So in effect the government is also liable for having employed them, their supervisors are liable for improper training and oversight and the actions carried out while they were employee and the individual is liable personally also.

In this particular case the complaint and Millbrook had been denied hearings for his claims that the lower courts and submitted a hand written, in pencil, complaint to the Supreme Court of the United States. Less than 1% of Supreme Court applications are heard by the court. I’m certain that this particular case was heard because it addresses a fundamental aspect of law and the only point of protection for a private person from the abuses of any government actor.

If you take the time to read the articles about the case you’ll find the disgusting actions of government lawyers and lower courts protecting the corrupt and abusive actions of government actors creating a series of faulty case law decisions that perpetuate the idea that violence and criminal actions by government actors is protected.

Millbrook filed a handwritten petition, in pencil no less, to the U.S. Supreme Court, and in a rare show of magnanimity, the Court agreed to hear his case and assigned a lawyer to represent him. Curiously enough, after the Court announced it could hear the case, the U.S. Justice Department—which had defended the government’s actions at every level of the judicial proceedings, including asking the Supreme Court not to take the case—did an about-face and switched its position to argue that the FTCA does apply to prison guards as law-enforcement officials.

Sadly much “case law” is biased garbage designed to allow corruption to continue as most people do not have the time, stamina or money to challenge bad decisions to higher and higher courts where the real law might be heard and decided.

This case ultimately should be a watershed decision to open the doors for all manner of complaints against abusive and corrupt actions by government actors, the legal profession and officials as it now clearly confirmed by the Supreme Court that they do not have protection for their illegal and unlawful actions.

MILLBROOK v. UNITED STATES ( )
477 Fed. Appx. 4, reversed and remanded.

Barrex
05-21-2014, 07:58 AM
Interesting.

jkr
05-21-2014, 08:26 AM
42
usc
1983

for everyone!

pcosmar
05-21-2014, 08:55 AM
Expect more dead inmates.

Dead men file no charges.

SeanTX
05-21-2014, 10:18 AM
Expect more dead inmates.

Dead men file no charges.

This. And they will use the usual JustUs system shennanigans to work around any Supreme Court ruling.

Like a few years back the Court ruled that "flipping off" a cop is protected speech -- so now when they kill, beat, tase, or arrest you for doing that, they just have to make up some other reason for initiating the contact.

ZENemy
05-21-2014, 10:35 AM
42
usc
1983

for everyone!

Yes, this.

Every person who, under color of any statute, ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage, of any State or Territory or the District of Columbia, subjects, or causes to be subjected, any citizen of the United States or other person within the jurisdiction thereof to the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution and laws, shall be liable to the party injured in an action at law, suit in equity, or other proper proceeding for redress, except that in any action brought against a judicial officer for an act or omission taken in such officer’s judicial capacity, injunctive relief shall not be granted unless a declaratory decree was violated or declaratory relief was unavailable. For the purposes of this section, any Act of Congress applicable exclusively to the District of Columbia shall be considered to be a statute of the District of Columbia.

Occam's Banana
05-22-2014, 02:21 PM
Bah! Get back to me when someone significant is actually held significantly liable for some significant wrongdoing.
(And I am NOT talking about some flunky bureaucrat being used as a "fall guy" and losing his job or whatnot.)

Three words are appropriate here: NOT. GONNA. HAPPEN.

Also, the author of the OP article seems to have a very low opinion of the "lower" courts and the various personages who operate therein. He vehemently denounces them as "corrupt" and accuses them of being part a "land of legal fictions" wherein "abusive" government officials are routinely "protected by [a] legal process" that involves the making of "faulty ... decisions" that are "biased garbage."

Now, far be it from me to disagree with him on any of those points. But I can't help but wonder: just who the hell does he think is going to be handling any "liability" cases that arise as a consequence of this decision if not those abundantly corrupt and government-official-protecting lower courts ... ?

dude58677
05-22-2014, 05:44 PM
What will happen is the federal agent auctions off your family members home without any court order and it is over something clearly unconstitutional. You go to local police to file a criminal complaint. The local officer says "I just don't have that authority to get involved". You insist that the Supreme Court does have the authority. The cop says "I'm no lawyer" and walks away. So then you get a lawyer and the lawyer says you "read the case wrong" or they do something and the case gets thrown out without reason.

These people don't care what the law says as long as they get their way.

The only people that stand up for you is Oathkeepers and/or getting Rand Paul as President in 2016.