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- January 1991
-
-
- DOMESTIC VIOLENCE:
- WHEN DO POLICE HAVE A CONSTITUTIONAL DUTY TO PROTECT?
-
- By
-
- Daniel L. Schofield, S.J.D.
- Special Agent
- Chief, Legal Instruction Unit
- FBI Academy
-
-
- Domestic violence is a serious crime problem that presents
- law enforcement officers with difficult and dangerous
- challenges. Victims of domestic violence sometimes file
- lawsuits claiming that the failure of police to make an arrest
- violated their right to police protection. Officers responding
- to a domestic assault call must decide whether an arrest is
- legally justified and whether an arrest is the most effective
- police action to prevent further domestic violence. Some police
- departments allow for officer discretion to diffuse domestic
- disturbances and preserve the family unit by not making an
- arrest. Other departments may limit officer discretion with a
- policy that mandates arrest if there is probable cause to
- believe a crime has been committed during a domestic
- disturbance. The debate over how to use limited police
- resources to best protect citizens against domestic violence
- often includes a discussion of whether police have a legal duty
- to offer a certain level of protection.
-
- This article discusses the extent to which police have a
- Federal constitutional duty to protect citizens against domestic
- violence and the circumstances under which police can be held
- liable under 42 U.S.C. Section 1983 (hereinafter Section 1983)
- for a breach of that duty. Specifically, the article discusses
- Section 1983 claims against the police based on an alleged
- violation of: (1) Substantive due process, (2) equal protection
- of the law, and (3) procedural due process. The potential for
- liability based on these three Federal constitutional claims is
- discussed in the context of recent court decisions involving
- suits against the police. It should be noted that this article
- does not address whether police have a legal duty to protect
- under State law, which depends on the various laws of each
- State. (1)
-
- SUBSTANTIVE DUE PROCESS CLAIMS
-
- The 14th amendment's Due Process Clause provides that "[n]o
- state shall...deprive any person of life, liberty, or property,
- without due process of law." (2) Claims against the police for
- a violation of substantive due process have historically alleged
- that a "special relationship" between police and a victim of
- domestic violence created a constitutional duty to protect that
- person from physical harm. However, the Supreme Court recently
- narrowed the circumstances giving rise to such "special
- relationships" and concluded that the Due Process Clause does
- not legally obligate law enforcement to protect an individual
- absent a custodial relationship.
-
- GENERAL RULE--NO CONSTITUTIONAL DUTY TO PROTECT
-
- In DeShaney v. Winnebago County Department of Social
- Services, (3) a boy, who was beaten and permanently injured by his
- father, claimed a due process violation because local officials
- knew he was being abused but did not act to remove him from his
- father's custody. The Supreme Court concluded that the State
- had no constitutional duty to protect the boy because the Due
- Process Clause is a limitation on the State's power to act, not
- a guarantee of certain minimal levels of safety and security.
- Further, according to the Court, the Due Process Clause confers
- no affirmative right to governmental aid, even where such aid
- may be necessary to protect an individual against private
- violence. (4) In doing so, the Court rejected the argument that
- a duty to protect arose because of a "special relationship" that
- existed, because the State knew the boy faced a special danger
- of abuse and specifically proclaimed by word and deed its
- intention to protect him against that danger. (5)
-
- The Court concluded that the Constitution imposes
- affirmative duties of care and protection only to particular
- individuals, such as incarcerated prisoners and involuntarily
- committed mental patients who are restrained against their will
- and rendered unable to care for themselves. (6) "The
- affirmative duty to protect arises not from the State's
- knowledge of the individual's predicament or from its
- expressions of intent to help him, but from the limitation which
- it has imposed on his freedom to act on his own behalf." (7)
- The Court also noted that while the State may have been aware of
- the dangers the boy faced, it played no part in their creation,
- nor did it do anything to render him any more vulnerable to
- them. And, even though the State once took custody of the boy
- and then returned him to his father's custody, it placed him in
- no worse position than he would have been in had the State not
- acted at all. (8)
-
- Courts interpreting DeShaney have rejected claims that
- police have a substantive due process duty to protect
- individuals against domestic violence. For example, in
- Balistreri v. Pacifica Police Department, (9) the U. S. Court
- of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit rejected a claim by a woman who
- was allegedly beaten and harassed by her estranged husband.
- Despite allegations that the police knew of her plight and
- affirmatively committed to protect her when it issued her a
- restraining order, the court concluded that DeShaney limited the
- circumstances giving rise to a "special relationship" to
- instances of custody, and that no such relationship existed in
- this case imposing a due process duty on the police to protect
- the victim from her husband. (10)
-
- WHERE POLICE ACTION INCREASES DANGER
-
- While DeShaney establishes the general rule that police
- have no Federal due process duty to protect citizens from
- private domestic violence, a constitutional duty to protect can
- arise where law enforcement action actually increases an
- individual's danger of, or vulnerability to, domestic violence
- beyond the level it would have been absent the police action.
- (11) For example, in Freeman v. Ferguson, (12) the U. S. Court
- of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit concluded that DeShaney
- establishes the possibility that police could be held liable for
- failure to protect an individual against private domestic
- violence if police conduct actually interfered with the
- protective services that would have otherwise been available in
- the community.
-
- Freeman involved a Section 1983 action against the police
- chief and city for the death of a woman and her daughter at the
- hands of the woman's estranged husband. The plaintiff alleged
- that the police chief failed to perform his duties by reason of
- a close personal relationship with the estranged husband and
- that he interfered with the conduct of other officers by
- directing them not to enforce a restraining order.
-
- The court found the allegation in Freeman distinguishable
- from DeShaney because it constituted a claim that the violence
- the decedents were subjected to was not solely the result of
- private action, but rather resulted from an affirmative act by
- the police chief to interfere with the protective services that
- would have otherwise been available in the community. The court
- acknowledged that it is not clear under DeShaney how large a
- role the police must play in the creation of danger before
- police assume a corresponding constitutional duty to protect,
- but "...that at some point such actions do create such a duty."
- (13) Courts have also suggested that police can be held liable
- for escorting or removing domestic violence victims to locations
- that actually increase their vulnerability to danger. (14)
-
- EQUAL PROTECTION CLAIMS
-
- The Supreme Court in DeShaney stated in a footnote that a
- State may not selectively deny its protective services to
- certain disfavored minorities without violating the Equal
- Protection Clause. (15) However, an earlier Federal district
- court decision in Thurman v. City of Torrington (16) is
- generally considered the seminal case spawning litigation
- against the police under the Equal Protection Clause.
-
- In Thurman, a woman and her son were allegedly threatened
- and assaulted numerous times by the woman's estranged husband in
- violation of his probation and a restraining order, despite
- numerous requests to the police department that they protect her
- and arrest her estranged husband. It was also alleged that the
- police department used an administrative classification that
- resulted in police protection being fully provided to persons
- abused by someone with whom the victim has no domestic
- relationship, but less protection when the victim is either:
- (1) A woman abused or assaulted by a spouse or boyfriend, or (2)
- a child abused by a father or stepfather.
-
- The Thurman court concluded that police are under an
- affirmative duty to preserve law and order and to protect the
- personal safety of persons in the community. The court further
- noted that police who have notice of the possibility of attacks
- on women in domestic relationships are under a duty to take
- reasonable measures to protect them; failure to perform this
- duty would constitute a denial of equal protection. (17)
-
- It is important to note that the precedential value of
- Thurman has been substantially undermined by the holding in
- DeShaney that the government has no constitutional duty to
- protect citizens against private domestic violence. In
- addition, more recent Federal court decisions hold that
- extensive evidence of intentional discrimination based on gender
- is required to prove an equal protection claim. These cases
- demonstrate the difficult burdens of proof that plaintiffs must
- meet in order to sustain an equal protection claim against the
- police for a failure to protect a victim of domestic violence.
-
- POLICE DISCRETION IN ARREST DECISIONS
-
- As a matter of constitutional law, police have considerable
- discretion in deciding whether and when to make an arrest. In
- McKee v. City of Rockwall, Texas, (18) the U. S. Court of Appeals
- for the Fifth Circuit interpreted DeShaney as endorsing the
- general principle that choices about the extent of governmental
- obligation to protect private parties from one another have been
- left to the democratic political process. It also held that
- there is no constitutional violation when the most that can be
- said of the police is that they stood by and did nothing when
- suspicious circumstances dictated a more active role. (19)
-
- In McKee, a woman claimed she was injured as a result of
- the refusal of police officers to make an arrest after a
- domestic assault call and that this non-arrest was the result of
- a city policy that discriminated on the basis of gender in
- violation of the Equal Protection Clause. Evidence of this
- policy consisted of: (1) An alleged statement by the chief of
- police that his officers did not like to make arrests in
- domestic assault cases because the women involved either
- wouldn't file charges or would drop them prior to trial, and (2)
- statistics that purported to show a lower percentage of arrests
- in domestic violence calls than in non-domestic assault calls.
-
- The McKee court ruled that the proffered evidence did not
- constitute an equal protection violation and that DeShaney
- should not be circumvented by converting every due process claim
- into an equal protection claim via an allegation that police
- officers exercised their discretion to act in one incident but
- not in another. (20) The court pointed out that police officers
- are not authorized to arrest absent probable cause, and that
- under DeShaney, officers who could have arrested the suspect in
- this case are not under any constitutional duty to do so. (21)
- The court held that DeShaney leaves officers and law enforcement
- agencies with discretionary authority regarding arrest
- decisions, and that officers need not fear that in any close
- case, they must choose between liability for a potential false
- arrest and liability for a potentially actionable non-arrest.
- (22)
-
- PROVING DISCRIMINATORY INTENT
-
- Is an equal protection violation established by proof that
- the failure of police to protect a victim of domestic violence
- resulted from a police department policy or practice of treating
- domestic assaults differently from non-domestic assaults and
- that women were disproportionately disadvantaged? The answer is
- "No." Courts have ruled that a police department's facially
- neutral policy of treating domestic assaults differently than
- non-domestic assaults only violates the Equal Protection Clause
- if it is proven that the policy disproportionately disadvantages
- women and that it was adopted with an intent to discriminate
- against women. The cases discussed below illustrate the
- significant evidentiary difficulties plaintiffs face in trying
- to prove discriminatory intent.
-
- For example, the court in McKee ruled that the plaintiff
- failed to prove that an alleged police department policy of
- discouraging arrests in domestic violence cases constituted
- discrimination against women in violation of the Equal
- Protection Clause. The court found the proffered evidence that
- some officers dislike making arrests in domestic cases to be
- different from a policy that is binding on all officers
- regardless of their sentiments. In addition, the court noted
- that the plaintiff's statistical comparison between domestic and
- non-domestic assault arrests was exaggerated by an error and
- failed to correct for the wide variety of factors that might
- influence the likelihood that police would make an arrest.
- These factors include: (1) Whether the assault was in progress
- when police arrived, (2) whether a gun or knife had been used,
- (3) whether the victim had suffered obvious physical injuries
- and required medical attention, and (4) whether the victim
- refused to press charges when the police arrived. (23)
-
- The plaintiff's statistics also failed to prove
- gender-based discrimination, since they did not indicate how
- many of the victims in the cleared assault cases were women or
- how many of the victims in the domestic violence cases were men.
- The McKee court concluded that the plaintiff was attempting to
- generalize a single incident of police department inaction in
- one case into a general policy or practice. To permit such an
- argument would eviscerate the discretion reserved to police
- officers by DeShaney. (24)
-
- In Hynson v. City of Chester Legal Department, (25) it was
- alleged that police officers engaged in a practice of failing to
- respond to complaints made by females against males known to
- them and that they specifically failed to consider the complaint
- of a woman who was killed by her former boyfriend as seriously
- as they would consider the complaint of a female against an
- unknown assailant. The U. S. Court of Appeals for the Third
- Circuit held that to sustain an equal protection claim, "...a
- plaintiff must proffer sufficient evidence that would allow a
- reasonable jury to infer that it is the policy of the police to
- provide less protection to victims of domestic violence than to
- other victims of violence, that discrimination against women was
- a motivating factor, and that the plaintiff was injured by the
- policy or custom." (26) The court said merely showing that
- categories used by the police in administering the law are
- domestic violence and nondomestic violence is not sufficient
- evidence of gender-based discrimination, absent a showing of an
- intent to discriminate against women. (27)
-
- PROCEDURAL DUE PROCESS CLAIMS
-
- Do victims of domestic violence ever have a
- constitutionally based right to police protection based on a
- "property interest" created by a State statute or a protective
- order? (28) In Coffman v. Wilson Police Department, (29) a
- spousal abuse victim claimed that her right to due process was
- violated because the police department never arrested or
- restrained her husband, despite the existence of a protective
- order and a contempt finding for violation of the protective
- order and her numerous reports to the police department of
- violations of this order. A Federal district court concluded
- that the State's Protection From Abuse Act did not create an
- enforceable property interest in police protection, but that a
- court order in the form of a protective order issued pursuant to
- that act stating that the appropriate police department shall
- enforce the order does create a constitutionally enforceable
- property right to police protection. (30) The court said
- "...the right is not to immediate and unthinking obedience to
- every request for assistance. Rather, it is the right to
- reasonable police response." (31) The court conceded that there
- is a great deal of discretion in police work and that the
- failure to dispatch a vehicle in response to a domestic violence
- call because other calls had greater importance would not
- necessarily constitute a violation of due process. (32)
-
- Despite the holding in this one district court decision in
- Coffman, procedural due process claims against police for their
- failure to protect victims of domestic violence are likely to
- fail for the following three reasons. First, other courts
- appear reluctant to adopt the rationale of the Coffman court
- that a State law and protective order creates a constitutionally
- recognized "property interest" to police protection. (33)
- Second, a police officer's negligent deprivation of a "property
- interest" to police protection would clearly not support a
- procedural due process claim, and it is not even clear whether
- an allegation of gross negligence or recklessness would suffice
- or whether intentional conduct must be proved. (34) Third, the
- Supreme Court in a 1990 decision in Zinermon v. Burch (35)
- appears to have precluded Section 1983 liability for a police
- agency if an officer's random and unauthorized intentional
- conduct in not enforcing a protective order is subject to a
- postdeprivation remedy in the form of a State tort action. (36)
-
- CONCLUSION
-
- The cases discussed in this article suggest that as a
- general rule, police do not have a constitutionally imposed duty
- to protect citizens against domestic violence. While
- exceptional circumstances may create such a duty and give rise
- to potential liability under Section 1983, lawsuits against the
- police for a failure to protect may have a greater likelihood of
- success in State court under a State-created duty to protect.
- Therefore, law enforcement administrators must decide how to
- most effectively allocate limited police resources to protect
- all the citizens in their communities.
-
- Any potential exposure to liability under Federal or State
- law for an alleged failure to protect can be reduced if law
- enforcement organizations take the following three initiatives.
- First, law enforcement agencies should promulgate a written
- policy regarding the handling of domestic assault calls that
- includes a clear statement of department policy setting forth
- the extent of officer discretion in making arrest decisions.
- Second, police departments should document the training officers
- receive in handling domestic violence situations and ensure that
- officers also understand what resources are available in the
- community to assist victims of domestic violence. Third, any
- statistical disparity in arrest rates that may exist between
- domestic and non-domestic assaults should be carefully evaluated
- to ensure that such disparity is not caused by any officer bias
- or animus toward female victims of domestic violence and that
- the disparity can be explained in terms of legitimate law
- enforcement interests.
-
-
- FOOTNOTES
-
- (1) See, "Does the Legal System Batter Women? Vindicating
- Battered Women's Constitutional Rights to Adequate Police
- Protection," 21 Ariz. St. L. J. 705, at 711 n. 64 (1989).
-
- (2) U.S. Const. amend. XIV, Section 1.
-
- (3) 109 S.Ct. 998 (1989).
-
- (4) Id. at 1003.
-
- (5) Id. at 1004.
-
- (6) Id. at 1005.
-
- (7) Id. at 1006.
-
- (8) Id.
-
- (9) 901 F.2d 696 (9th Cir. 1990).
-
- (10) Id. at 700. In Bryson v. City of Edmond, 905 F.2d
- 1386 (10th Cir. 1990), the court held that the fact police
- surrounded a post office where there was a hostage situation and
- did not attempt to enter the building for more than 1-1/2 hours
- did not create a special situation in which affirmative duties
- of protection arose. A contrary rule would impose
- constitutional duties on the police whenever they respond to
- reports of violence and assemble at the scene contrary to the
- holding in DeShaney.
-
- (11) In Horton v. Flenory. 889 F.2d 454 (3d Cir. 1989), the
- court concluded that the holding in DeShaney is limited to
- situations in which the State is not involved in the harm, either
- as a custodian or as an actor.
-
- (12) 911 F.2d 52 (8th Cir. 1990).
-
- (13) Id. at 55.
-
- (14) See, e.g., Dudosh v. City of Allentown, 722 F.Supp. 1233
- (E.D. Pa. 1989).
-
- (15) 109 S.Ct. at 1004, n. 3.
-
- (16) 595 F.Supp. 1521 (D. Conn. 1984).
-
- (17) Id. at 1527.
-
- (18) 877 F.2d 409 (5th Cir. 1989), cert. denied, 110 S.Ct. 727
- (1990).
-
- (19) Id. at 413.
-
- (20) Id.
-
- (21) Id. at 414.
-
- (22) Id.
-
- (23) Id. at 415.
-
- (24) Id. at 416.
-
- (25) 864 F.2d 1026 (3d Cir. 1988).
-
- (26) Id. at 1031.
-
- (27) Id. See also, Watson v. City of Kansas City, Kansas,
- 857 F.2d 690 (10th Cir. 1988); and Howell v. City of Catoosa,
- 729 F.Supp. 1308 (N.D. Okla. 1990).
-
- (28) For a general discussion, see, "Actionable Inaction:
- Section 1983 Liability for Failure to Act," 53 U. Chi. L. Rev.
- 1048 (1986).
-
- (29) 739 F.Supp. 257 (E.D. Pa. 1990).
-
- (30) Id. at 264.
-
- (31) Id. at 265.
-
- (32) Id. at 266.
-
- (33) See, e.g., Doe by Nelson v. Milwaukee County, 903 F.2d
- 499 (7th Cir. 1990); and Hynson v. City of Chester, 731 F.Supp.
- 1236 (E.D. Pa. 1990).
-
- (34) Daniels v. Williams, 106 S.Ct. 662 at 666, n.3 (1986).
-
- (35) 110 S.Ct. 975 (1990).
-
- (36) Id. at 984.
-
-
- _______________
-
- Law enforcement officers of other than Federal jurisdiction
- who are interested in this article should consult their legal
- adviser. Some police procedures ruled permissible under Federal
- constitutional law are of questionable legality under State law
- or are not permitted at all.
-