New Delhi: The judiciary must be allowed to interpret the Constitution and its independence is not just a legal principle but fundamental pillar of a vibrant democracy, Justice Hima Kohli of the Supreme Court has said.
“It is imperative that all three pillars (legislature, executive and judiciary) of the State work in parallel and not in tandem, at arm’s length and not hand in hand, to give strength to the democratic system.
“This itself will preserve the independence of the judiciary and protect its autonomy and impartiality. It is equally essential to recognise the judiciary’s role in the constitutional dialogue as it acts like a safety valve for fostering our democratic values,” Justice Kohli said.
She was speaking on the subject of “Independent Judiciary: Critical for a Vibrant Democracy” at a function organised by FICCI in collaboration with Bharat Chamber of Commerce and the Indian Council of Arbitration in Kolkata on Saturday.
“Independence of the judiciary is not just a legal principle but a fundamental pillar of a vibrant democracy. The Indian judiciary has shown remarkable resilience and determination in maintaining its independence and integrity and discharging its constitutional duties,” she said.
The apex court judge spoke on various aspects related to judicial independence and said that the judiciary, by upholding the rule of law and ensuring that the government operates within the remit of its authority, promotes stability and effectiveness of democratic institutions.
It is equally essential to recognise the judiciary’s role in the constitutional dialogue as it acts like a safety valve for fostering our democratic values, she said.
“The judiciary must be allowed to interpret the Constitution and make decisions based solely on the Constitution and the laws. It is this interpretation that offers a guarantee for the Constitution to remain a living document that keeps on evolving over time, while remaining rooted in its fundamental values and principles.
“Therefore, having a robust constitutional dialogue in India, where all the branches of the State engage in a meaningful conversation with each other and at the same time, respect each other’s independence and the respective delineated roles, is the best thing for a vibrant democracy,” she said.
The judiciary also protects citizens from arbitrary exercise of power and ensures that their rights and freedom are respected and upheld, she said.
“Absent the judiciary’s role of maintaining checks and balances, democratic institutions would be vulnerable to corruption, abuse of power and erosion of the trust of the citizens in the government. The role of the courts in upholding the rule of law and providing checks and balances on other wings of the State makes the judiciary a critical pillar of democracy,” she said.
The judge referred to the imposition of the Emergency and said the judiciary was put to a severe test during the period.
“In the face of such adversity, some of the judges of the Supreme Court and at least nine High Courts had shown remarkable courage and independence. They stood up to the government’s attempts to erode judicial autonomy and protected fundamental rights of the citizens,” she said.
Justice Kohli also spoke about recent key judgements like the one which declared privacy as a fundamental right and part of right to life and personal liberty and said, “the judiciary has been at the forefront of protecting the citizens’ rights, particularly in cases relating to civil liberties, environmental protection and gender justice.”
Dealing with the role of media, she said it plays a significant role in informing the public and facilitating civic engagement.
New Delhi: The BJP on Monday hit out at the Aam Aadmi Party over its street protests against Delhi Deputy Chief Minister Manish Sisodia’s arrest, asserting that the CBI is acting lawfully against the “corrupt” but the city’s ruling party does not seem to believe in law, Constitution and people.
With its “drama” and show of “anarchy”, the AAP has signaled that it will not let probe agencies do their work which amounts to obstructing the process of justice and contempt of court, BJP spokesperson Gaurav Bhatia told reporters after Sisodia was sent to the CBI remand till March 4 in the case of alleged irregularities and corruption in excise policy, now withdrawn.
The BJP leader described the AAP as the “Arajak Apradh Party” (anarchic, criminal party) and said Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal seems to have taken oath on the Constitution to destroy it, he alleged.
Neither does Kejriwal abide by the law nor he sacks his ministers involved in corruption, he said, noting that Satyendar Jain is behind bars for months in a money laundering case.
Jain has not received bail yet because courts believe that the charges against him are serious, the BJP leader said.
A special CBI court on Monday remanded Sisodia in five-day custody of the central probe agency till March 4, a day after his arrest in the excise scam case.
Aam Aadmi Party leaders and workers held protests in several states against the arrest in connection with alleged corruption in the now-scrapped excise policy relating to the sale of alcohol.
Raipur: The Congress on Friday announced that it will amend its Constitution to give proper representation to SCs, STs, OBCs, minorities, women, and those below 50 years in the Congress Working Committee – the party’s top decision-making body.
In one of the proposals as made at the Udaipur ‘Chintan Shivir’ in May last year, the party will make these provisions by amending 26 articles and 32 rules.
If the proposed amendments are passed in the plenary, then former party chiefs Sonia Gandhi and Rahul Gandhi will become lifelong CWC members, along with former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.
General Secretary, in charge of communication, Jairam Ramesh said that the most important proposal is to provide 50 per cent reservations in the Working Committee for Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes, OBCs, Minorities, women and youth.
There is also a proposal to increase the strength of the CWC, which is 25 right now including party’s floor leaders in Parliament and the party president.
The Congress Steering Committee, on Friday morning, decided unanimously to empower the party President to nominate members to the CWC.
“We had a 2-1/2 hour discussion on this issue and the dominant view, overwhelming view was keeping in mind the political challenges facing the country, facing the Congress Party in its capacity as the main opposition and keeping in mind the far-reaching amendments that we are going to bring about tomorrow and day after in our party’s constitution, 16 Articles are being amended, 32 rules are being amended.
“Keeping in mind, both these factors, the unanimous view of the Steering Committee was that this is the time to empower the Congress President to nominate members to the Congress Working Committee,” Ramesh added.
However, sources said that Abhishek Manu Singhvi, Digvijaya Singh and Ajay Maken advocated elections to the CWC elections but eventually aligned with the majority view. The members of G-23 and their sympathisers of the grouping did not speak in favour of the elections, sources said.
Raipur: The Congress on Friday announced that it will amend its Constitution to give proper representation to SCs, STs, OBCs, minorities, women, and those below 50 years in the Congress Working Committee – the party’s top decision-making body.
In one of the proposals as made at the Udaipur ‘Chintan Shivir’ in May last year, the party will make these provisions by amending 26 articles and 32 rules.
If the proposed amendments are passed in the plenary, then former party chiefs Sonia Gandhi and Rahul Gandhi will become lifelong CWC members, along with former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.
General Secretary, in charge of communication, Jairam Ramesh said that the most important proposal is to provide 50 per cent reservations in the Working Committee for Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes, OBCs, Minorities, women and youth.
There is also a proposal to increase the strength of the CWC, which is 25 right now including party’s floor leaders in Parliament and the party president.
The Congress Steering Committee, on Friday morning, decided unanimously to empower the party President to nominate members to the CWC.
“We had a 2-1/2 hour discussion on this issue and the dominant view, overwhelming view was keeping in mind the political challenges facing the country, facing the Congress Party in its capacity as the main opposition and keeping in mind the far-reaching amendments that we are going to bring about tomorrow and day after in our party’s constitution, 16 Articles are being amended, 32 rules are being amended.
“Keeping in mind, both these factors, the unanimous view of the Steering Committee was that this is the time to empower the Congress President to nominate members to the Congress Working Committee,” Ramesh added.
However, sources said that Abhishek Manu Singhvi, Digvijaya Singh and Ajay Maken advocated elections to the CWC elections but eventually aligned with the majority view. The members of G-23 and their sympathisers of the grouping did not speak in favour of the elections, sources said.
But proving that Officer Aikala had violated the Constitution was not enough — the officer was protected by something called qualified immunity, a legal defense officers use to block suits alleging all manner of misconduct, so long as they have not violated “clearly established law.” To overcome Aikala’s qualified immunity defense, Mattos’ lawyer would have to find a Supreme Court opinion, or an opinion from this same court of appeals, holding that tasing an innocent person under highly similar circumstances was unconstitutional. No prior decision from that court of appeals or the Supreme Court had ever addressed the use of a taser in “dart mode” — where the Taser shoots out darts with electrical currents that attach to a person — the setting Aikala had used against Jayzel. And, at the time, that court of appeals had never issued an opinion finding that an officer’s decision to use a taser violated the Fourth Amendment.
Because no prior court opinion had similar facts, the appeals court judges dismissed Jayzel’s excessive-force claim, even though they believed Aikala’s decision to tase a potential domestic violence victim went “far beyond the pale” and violated the Fourth Amendment.
Welcome to the upside-down world of qualified immunity.
Last month, our screens were filled with videos of Tyre Nichols being beaten to death on a Memphis street — and of the officers who killed him laughing and joking afterward, with no apparent concern that their body cameras recorded the attack and no urgency about getting Nichols medical care. Once again, horrifying images of a Black man killed by police are prompting impassioned pleas for more accountability and justice when officers violate the law. Qualified immunity is squarely in the sights of many legislators and advocates.
The concept entered public consciousness almost three years ago, following the murder of George Floyd. In the summer of 2020, the House passed the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act, which would have abolished qualified immunity, among other important reforms. But Republican Sen. Tim Scott called ending qualified immunity a “poison pill” in negotiations, and calls to end qualified immunity were matched in intensity by those who opposed such reforms. In August 2020, Indiana congressman Jim Banks introduced a bill to preserve qualified immunity, threatening that eliminating the defense was simply “another way of saying abolish the police” because, without qualified immunity, “criminals would … open endless frivolous lawsuits against the officers who put them behind bars” and officers would be “forced to quit, because they couldn’t afford to serve any longer.”
Efforts to pass the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act failed after more than a year; qualified immunity was, apparently, a key sticking point. During that same period of time, more than half the states introduced laws that would effectively end qualified immunity, but most met the same fate after union leaders and government officials raised similar concerns in opposition to the legislation.
Jim Banks’ predictions about the horrors that would occur if we did away with qualified immunity are nothing new. For decades, defenders of qualified immunity have claimed that the defense is necessary to prevent courthouses from filling with frivolous lawsuits that would bankrupt well-meaning police officers for split-second mistakes, discourage people ever from agreeing to become police officers and push society into a lawless chaos.
I have spent much of my academic career empirically examining these and other justifications for qualified immunity doctrine and have found each to be overblown and, sometimes, just plain false. It’s past time to get the facts straight about what qualified immunity is, what it does and what would happen if it were eliminated.
The Supreme Court created qualified immunity out of thin air in 1967, just six years after the Court first recognized that people could sue police officers and other government officials for violating their constitutional rights. In that first qualified immunity case, Pierson v. Ray, the Court held that the officers were entitled to a “good faith” immunity in civil rights cases. Chief Justice Earl Warren, writing for the majority, explained that this immunity from suit was necessary because, otherwise, officers could be held liable when they mistakenly believed the law authorized an arrest. As Chief Justice Warren explained, “A policeman’s lot is not so unhappy that he must choose between being charged with dereliction of duty if he does not arrest when he has probable cause and being mulcted in damages if he does.”
Although a “good faith” defense was the impetus for qualified immunity, today, officers are entitled to qualified immunity even if they act in bad faith, so long as there is no prior court decision with nearly identical facts. For more than five decades, the Supreme Court has repeatedly strengthened qualified immunity’s protections, describing each additional layer of defense in increasingly terrified tones as necessary to protect officers from the unyielding power of civil rights lawsuits.
The first — and arguably most seismic — shift to qualified immunity came in 1982 in a case called Harlow v. Fitzgerald. In Harlow, the Court concluded that officers’ entitlement to qualified immunity should not depend on whether they acted in good faith. In order to prove good faith, officers would have to be deposed — questioned under oath — about their state of mind at the time they violated the Constitution, and a case would go to a jury if an officer’s good faith was in dispute. Justice Powell, who wrote the majority opinion in Harlow, reasoned that requiring officers to participate in discovery and trial in an “insubstantial case” was a burden to the officer, who would need to spend time defending himself instead of doing his job. And the Court feared that this type of distraction would harm not only the officer but also “society as a whole” by discouraging “able citizens from acceptance of public office” and “dampen[ing] the ardor of all but the most resolute, or the most irresponsible [public officials], in the unflinching discharge of their duties.” So, to protect officers from having to participate in discovery and trial in “insubstantial cases,” the Court held in Harlow that an officer’s intentions do not matter to the qualified immunity analysis. Instead, officers are entitled to qualified immunity so long as they do not violate what the Court called “clearly established law.”
The Supreme Court’s decision in Harlow did not explain what it meant by “clearly established law.” But the Court’s decisions over the next 40 years have created a standard that seems virtually impossible to meet. The Court has repeatedly instructed that except in extraordinary circumstances the law can only be “clearly established” by a prior court decision. And the Court has emphasized that the prior court decision cannot simply set out a constitutional principle in general terms. It is not enough, for example, to find a case that says it is unconstitutional to use force against a person who is not resisting arrest. Instead, the prior court decision must include facts that are so similar to the facts in the present case that every reasonable officer would know that what he was doing was wrong. In recent years, the Supreme Court has repeatedly reversed lower courts that have denied officers qualified immunity, chastising those courts for not appreciating the importance of qualified immunity to “society as a whole” and arguing that they “misunderstood the ‘clearly established’ analysis” because they “failed to identify a case where an officer acting under similar circumstances as [the defendant] was held to have violated the Fourth Amendment.”
Lower courts appear to have since gotten the message, repeatedly citing the Supreme Court’s instruction that clearly established law should not be defined “at a high level of generality” when assessing whether officers are entitled to qualified immunity. Courts have granted officers qualified immunity even when they have engaged in egregious behavior — not because what the officers did was acceptable, but because there wasn’t a prior case in which that precise conduct had been held unconstitutional. The hairsplitting can be extreme. In Baxter v. Bracey, an appeals court granted qualified immunity to officers who released their police dog on a burglary suspect who was sitting down with his hands up. Although a prior court decision had held that it was unconstitutional to release a police dog on a suspect who was lying down, the court in Alexander Baxter’s case granted qualified immunity to the officers because, it held, the prior decision did not clearly establish the unconstitutionality of the officers’ decision to release a police dog on a person who was seated with his hands in the air.
In Kelsay v. Ernst, an appeals court held that an officer who slammed a nonviolent, nonthreatening woman to the ground — breaking her collarbone and knocking her unconscious — was entitled to qualified immunity. Prior cases had held that “where a nonviolent misdemeanant poses no threat to officers and is not actively resisting arrest or attempting to flee, an officer may not employ force just because the suspect is interfering with police or behaving disrespectfully.” But, the court held, the officer was entitled to qualified immunity because this precedent did not clearly establish that “a deputy was forbidden to use a takedown maneuver to arrest a suspect who ignored the deputy’s instruction to ‘get back here’ and continued to walk away from the officer.”
In Jessop v. City of Fresno, police officers stole $225,000 in cash and rare coins when executing a warrant. Prior cases had held that it was unconstitutional for officers to steal, but those cases were factually distinct — involving the theft of different types of property under different circumstances. According to the appeals court, the officers “ought to have recognized” that it was wrong to steal the coins and cash, but “they did not have clear notice that it violated the Fourth Amendment” because prior court decisions “did not put the constitutional question beyond debate.”
This could also have been the fate of a lawsuit brought on behalf of George Floyd’s family. Qualified immunity never threatened Floyd’s family’s ability to recover money for his murder at the hands of Minneapolis police in May 2020. They settled their case with the City of Minneapolis for $27 million before qualified immunity ever could be raised. This is likely because the city anticipated the blowback that would come from arguing that the case against Derek Chauvin should be dismissed because Floyd’s family could not point to a prior case with nearly identical facts. But if George Floyd’s case had not received the press scrutiny it did and had not inspired the same degree of public attention and rage, a lawyer for the city of Minneapolis could well have argued that qualified immunity shielded Chauvin from liability. Officers have killed people in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Missouri, New Hampshire, Oklahoma and Texas in just the way Chauvin killed Floyd — with a knee on their back or neck — but have had their civil rights lawsuits dismissed on qualified immunity grounds.
In a 2009 decision, the Supreme Court made it even more difficult for plaintiffs to find “clearly established law” by holding that lower courts could grant qualified immunity without first ruling on the constitutionality of a defendant’s behavior. So, the Supreme Court has instructed lower courts to grant defendants qualified immunity unless the plaintiff can find a prior case in which an officer violated the Constitution under nearly identical circumstances, and has also instructed lower courts that they do not need to issue these types of constitutional rulings.
For a plaintiff’s civil rights attorney trying to defeat a qualified immunity motion, the challenges of finding “clearly established law” are almost too many to count. Think about all the stars that would have had to align for Jayzel Mattos to be able to defeat Officer Aikala’s qualified immunity motion.
First, another officer would previously have had to tase someone in “dart mode” under circumstances similar to Mattos’s case. Then the person who was tased would have had to file a lawsuit — which is hardly certain. Next, that prior lawsuit would have had to result in a court opinion explaining that the officer’s use of the Taser in dart mode was unconstitutional. Importantly, it would not be enough if the plaintiff in the prior case won some money in a settlement; if the case was settled before the judge issued an opinion ruling that the officer’s use of the Taser in dart mode was unconstitutional, then that case could not clearly establish the law for Mattos’s case.
Even if there was a prior court opinion finding that the use of a Taser in dart mode under similar circumstances was unconstitutional, then Mattos’s lawyer would have had to find it. Scott Michelman — the legal director of the Washington, D.C., branch of the ACLU and a lecturer at Harvard Law School, who has argued before the Supreme Court and seven courts of appeals and has authored a legal casebook dedicated to civil rights litigation — has spent upwards of a week researching court decisions in order to find “clearly established law” to defeat a single qualified immunity motion.
To make matters worse, the Supreme Court allows defendants to immediately appeal any qualified immunity denial. Federal courts usually operate under what is called a final judgment rule — meaning that a decision by a trial court cannot be appealed until the case is over. So, if one side gets a ruling it does not like — requiring discovery of information they would prefer to keep secret, or denying a motion to dismiss — the parties usually have to wait to appeal that decision until one side or the other wins.
But qualified immunity is different. Because, as the Supreme Court has said, qualified immunity is meant to protect officers from the burdens of discovery and trial, an officer who is denied qualified immunity can immediately appeal that decision. What this means in practice is that officers can call time-out in the middle of a case, adding months or years to the case.
Defenders of qualified immunity have not been able to summon a reason why officers who violate the Constitution should be protected from liability simply because a court has not previously ruled nearly identical conduct to be unconstitutional. Instead, the strongest defenses of qualified immunity have been predictions that the world would be worse off without it. But claims about the need for qualified immunity are unsupported by the facts on the ground.
Although the Supreme Court and defenders of qualified immunity are quick to say that the doctrine protects officers from bankruptcy, settlements and judgments against officers are almost always paid by their employers or by insurers. I studied police misconduct settlements and judgments in 81 jurisdictions across the country, over a six-year period, and found that officers paid just 0.02 percent of the more than $735 million that plaintiffs received. Officers in only two of the jurisdictions were required to contribute anything to settlements and judgments entered against them; their average payment was $4,194, their median payment was $2,250 and no officer paid more than $25,000. Officers do not need qualified immunity to protect them from bankruptcy when they are sued; local governments almost always pick up the tab.
The Supreme Court has said that qualified immunity “gives government officials breathing room to make reasonable but mistaken judgments about open legal questions.” The International Association of Chiefs of Police has argued that qualified immunity “allows police officers to respond to incidents without pause” and “make split-second decisions” and that, without qualified immunity, officers would not be shielded from liability when taking “good faith actions.” But qualified immunity is not necessary to shield officers from liability when they make reasonable mistakes; the Fourth Amendment, as interpreted by the Supreme Court, already shields officers from responsibility in these types of cases. Courts have held that officers can mistakenly search or arrest someone without adequate cause, or use force against someone who was not posing a threat; so long as their mistakes were reasonable, they have not violated the Constitution.
The Supreme Court has also repeatedly described qualified immunity as necessary to protect officers from the burdens and distractions of defending themselves in “insubstantial” cases. But there are plenty of other ways that weak cases are weeded out of court. People without strong evidence to support their claims will have a harder time finding a lawyer to represent them, a harder time filing a lawsuit with facts that set out a plausible claim and a harder time proving a constitutional violation. When the Supreme Court passionately describes the importance of qualified immunity doctrine to officers and “society as a whole,” it ignores all of the other protections already in place to shield officers from “insubstantial” cases.
The Supreme Court has asserted that “the driving force” behind qualified immunity is to spare government officials the burdens of participating in litigation. But qualified immunity may actually increase litigation costs and delays. Defendants raised qualified immunity in more than 37 percent of the almost 1,200 cases I studied — sometimes multiple times during the case and on appeal. Each time qualified immunity is raised, it must be researched, briefed and argued by the parties and decided by the judge. And deciding whether officers are entitled to qualified immunity is no small feat. One court of appeals judge remarked that “wading through the doctrine of qualified immunity is one of the most morally and conceptually challenging tasks federal appellate court judges routinely face.”
The time and effort necessary to resolve qualified immunity motions could still advance the goals of the doctrine if it effectively protected officers from discovery and trial. But in my study, just 8.6 percent of defendants’ qualified immunity motions led to the dismissal of the plaintiffs’ cases. In the remaining 91.4 percent of motions, parties and courts dedicated time and money to research, brief, argue and decide defendants’ entitlement to qualified immunity without avoiding the costs of discovery and trial.
The Supreme Court has also explained that the protections of qualified immunity are necessary so that officers are not held liable unless they have notice of the unconstitutionality of their conduct. The Court has written that factually similar cases are necessary to “clearly establish” the law because “it is sometimes difficult for an officer to determine how the relevant legal doctrine … will apply to the factual situation the officer confronts,” and that “precedent involving similar facts can … provide an officer notice that a specific use of force is unlawful.” But upon studying hundreds of policies, trainings and other materials used by California law enforcement officers, I found that they are not actually being educated about the facts and holdings of the court decisions that could clearly establish the law for qualified immunity purposes. Instead, officers are taught general legal principles — for example, the Supreme Court’s instruction in a case called Graham v. Connor that officers can use force if it is “objectively reasonable under the circumstances.” Then officers are trained to apply that general standard in the innumerable situations that might come their way.
Even if officers learned about the cases that clearly establish the law for qualified immunity purposes, there is no reason to believe that they could remember the facts and holdings of those cases and then recall those facts and holdings during high-speed, high-stress interactions. As one federal judge wrote, “It strains credulity to believe that a reasonable officer, as he is approaching a suspect to arrest, is thinking to himself: ‘Are the facts here anything like the facts in York v. City of Las Cruces?’”
Less than 4 percent of the almost 1,200 police misconduct cases I examined were dismissed because of qualified immunity. This finding makes it seem as if qualified immunity is not so bad after all. But because there are so many other ways for weaker cases to get dismissed, qualified immunity ends up leading to the dismissal of cases with compelling claims of unconstitutional policing that have managed to overcome all these other barriers. Although the Supreme Court has described qualified immunity as a tool to weed out “insubstantial” cases, it actually does its work on the most substantial cases that cannot be kicked out of court any other way.
And even when a case is not dismissed on qualified immunity grounds, the doctrine can make winning harder. Although the officers who tased Mattos were granted qualified immunity, this did not actually end Mattos’ case. Her attorney, Eric Seitz, had included state law claims for battery and assault against Officer Aikala in Mattos’ complaint, for which qualified immunity did not apply.
Five and a half years after Mattos filed her case, her state law claims settled for $40,000. Seitz split the award with Mattos. He estimated that he spent at least $40,000 out of his own pocket, including trips from Hawaii to the mainland for the court of appeals arguments, and about $200,000 worth of his time. Seitz told the Maui News that the case had been worth bringing, even though it resulted in a significant financial loss to him, because the court of appeals issued a ruling that the officer’s Taser use was unconstitutional — a ruling that has been used in later cases to defeat qualified immunity. “We do [these cases] because they’re important to do,” he said. But our system cannot be working correctly if plaintiffs’ attorneys must bankroll years-long efforts just to clarify the scope of constitutional rights.
At his State of the Union, President Joe Biden called on Congress to pass comprehensive police reform. “When police officers or departments violate the public trust they must be held accountable,” Biden said, and received a standing ovation from both sides of the aisle. President Biden received another standing ovation when he said, “Let’s commit ourselves to make the words of Tyre’s mother come true: ‘Something good must come from this.’” Yet Indiana congressman Jim Banks reintroduced his bill to preserve qualified immunity on January 10, the day Tyre Nichols died, and Republican Sen. Tim Scott has called resurrecting the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act “a nonstarter.” Instead of qualified immunity reform, Sen. Scott has said that he is focusing on increasing police funding and training. On Twitter, Scott wrote: “The question we have to ask ourselves is, do we care more about tribalism, posturing, and preserving the status quo? Or do we care about actually doing our jobs and restoring faith in our nation? Put me down for the latter.”
You can put me down for the latter, too. But it is those opposed to qualified immunity reform who are succumbing to tribalism, posturing, and preserving the status quo. To be clear, ending qualified immunity would not usher in a golden age of police accountability; there are many other shields that protect officers and local governments from being held responsible when they violate the Constitution. Yet it is an important start. If something good is to come from this latest tragedy, we cannot be distracted by overblown and false claims by qualified immunity’s defenders. If our lawmakers are going to “rise to this moment,” as President Biden has asked them to, a key first step is to focus on facts, not fearmongering.
New Delhi: A plea has been filed in the Supreme Court seeking a direction to the Centre to constitute a committee monitored by a retired apex court judge to enquire and investigate into the Hindenburg Research report which made a slew of allegations against the business conglomerate led by industrialist Gautam Adani.
The fresh public interest litigation (PIL), filed by advocate Vishal Tiwari, has also sought directions to set up a special committee to oversee the sanction policy for loans of over Rs 500 crore given to big corporates.
Last week, another PIL was filed in the apex court seeking prosecution of short seller Nathan Anderson of US-based firm Hindenburg Research and his associates in India and the US for allegedly exploiting innocent investors and the “artificial crashing” of Adani Group’s stock value in the market.
The Adani Group stocks have taken a beating on the bourses after Hindenburg Research made a litany of allegations including fraudulent transactions and share-price manipulation against the business conglomerate led by Gautam Adani.
The Adani Group has dismissed the charges as lies, saying it complies with all laws and disclosure requirements.
In his plea, Tiwari has said the petition depicts the “drastic condition and fate of people” when there arises a situation of share fall in the securities market due to various reasons.
“Lots of people who had the whole lifetime saving in such stocks get a maximum setback due to fall in such shares with a huge amount of money getting into drain,” the PIL said.
It said with the recent news of the publication of the Hindenburg report, it has led to the loss of huge amount for various investors who have invested their life-saving in such shares.
“In the aftermath of an unprecedented attack on billionaire Gautam Adani’s vast empire by Hindenburg, the market value of all 10 Adani stocks have halved with investors sitting with a colossal loss…,” the plea said.
It claimed that no concrete steps have been taken by authorities on the issue despite a “massive attack being perpetrated” on the country’s economy.
“It is ultimately the public money for which the respondents (Centre and others) are answerable and there needs to be strict concern for mitigating of such loans with a clear process and sanction policy for such high stake loan amount,” it said.
The plea has made the Centre and others, including the Reserve Bank of India and the Securities and Exchange Board of India, as respondents.
“Here in New York we will never let the extremist, anti-choice agenda to prevent anyone from accessing reproductive health care,” Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie said Tuesday at a rally near the state Capitol with abortion-rights activists.
New York added stronger abortion rights into state law in 2019 and approved new laws last year to shield providers and patients from out-of-state litigation.
But in the wake of the Roe vs. Wade decision, abortion rights advocates and some lawmakers pushed to enshrine the protections in the constitution as a way to make it harder to overturn by any future legislature.
The amendment adds new protected classes to the constitution’s existing Equal Protection Clause, which prohibits discrimination based on a person’s race, color, creed or religion. It would also bar intentional government discrimination based on a person’s ethnicity, national origin, age, disability or sex, including sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression, pregnancy, pregnancy outcomes and reproductive health care and autonomy.
“We’re modernizing our constitution to recognize that all these categories of New Yorkers should have equal rights under the constitution to be protected from discrimination,” Sen. Liz Krueger (D-Manhattan) said at a news conference. “Because guess what we’ve learned recently? The courts can change and suddenly protections you thought you had because some court cases aren’t there anymore.”
Gov. Kathy Hochul hailed the measure, and she proposed new laws in her State of the State address earlier this month that would allow pharmacists to directly prescribe contraceptive pills and increase Medicaid reimbursement rates for reproductive health providers.
“I’m the first governor in the state of New York to ever have had a pregnancy, ever raise children, ever had to go through all the screaming,” Hochul, the first woman governor, said at the rally. “I know more than any governor before me of what it’s like to be a woman and whether someone else in Washington has the right to take away what I should be able to decide on my own.”
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( With inputs from : www.politico.com )
New Delhi: Law Minister Kiren Rijiju on Sunday sought to support the views of a retired high court judge, who said the Supreme Court “hijacked” the Constitution by deciding to appoint judges itself.
The government and the judiciary have been at loggerheads over the process of appointment of judges to the higher judiciary,
Rijiju shared the video of an interview of Justice R S Sodhi (retd), a former judge of the Delhi Court, saying it is “voice of a judge” and that majority of people have similar “sane views”.
Justice Sodhi said the right to frame laws lies with Parliament.
The law minister also said that “actually majority of the people have similar sane views. It’s only those people who disregard the provisions of the Constitution and mandate of the people think that they are above the Constitution of India.”
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“Real beauty of Indian Democracy is its success. People rule themselves through their representatives.Elected representatives represent the interests of the People & make laws. Our Judiciary is independent and our Constitution is Supreme,” the minister tweeted.
In the interview, Justice Sodhi also said the apex court cannot frame laws as it does not have the right to do so. The right to frame laws belongs to Parliament, he said.
“… Whether you can amend the Constitution? Only Parliament will amend Constitution. But here I feel the Supreme Court for the first time ‘hijacked’ the Constitution. After ‘hijacking’ they (SC) said that we will appoint (judges) ourselves and the government will have no role in it,” Justice Sodhi said in Hindi.
The appointment of judges to the Supreme Court and the high courts has become a major flashpoint between the Executive and the Judiciary.
While Rijiju has described the collegium system to appoint judges as something “alien” to the Indian Constitution, Vice President Jagdeep Dhankhar has questioned the top court for striking down the National Judicial Appointments Commission Act (NJAC)and a related constitution amendment.
Also the chairman of Rajya Sabha, Dhankar had said a law passed by Parliament, which reflects the will of the people, was “undone” by the Supreme Court and “the world does not know of any such instance”.
By bringing the NJAC law, the government had sought to overturn the collegium system which came into being in 1992.
The apex court has questioned the government for delay in clearing the appointments of Supreme Court and High Court judges.
Last week, the Supreme Court collegium had for the second time reiterated the names of two advocates for appointment as judges of the Calcutta High Court “expeditiously”, saying it was not open for the government to repeatedly send back the same proposal.
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