Five years after George Floyd's death, calls to reform qualified immunity mostly fall silentNew Foto - Five years after George Floyd's death, calls to reform qualified immunity mostly fall silent

WASHINGTON — The death of George Floyd at the hands of a police officer in May 2020 gave momentum to a cross-ideological effort to reform the legal defense known as "qualified immunity," which can protect cops even when they have violated the Constitution. Bills were introduced in Congress calling to abolish the defense. Multiple cases piled up at the Supreme Court urging the justices to intervene. Much ink was spilled. And then, nothing happened. With the fifth anniversary of Floyd's death approaching this weekend, Congress still has not passed any legislation seeking to even reform, let alone abolish, qualified immunity. The Supreme Court has rejected dozens of cases asking it to do the same. What minor changes have occurred, via court rulings or state legislative actions, have had little practical impact on a nationwide basis. For Karen Blum, a professor at Suffolk University Law School in Boston and a long-term critic of qualified immunity, the situation is nothing short of depressing. "After George Floyd, it was the first time I was actually optimistic and very positive that something would be done, no matter how little," she said. "But nothing, I mean nothing, has happened." The doctrine, first adopted by the Supreme Court in 1967, gives government officials the benefit of the doubt when they violate the Constitution. When a plaintiff files a federal civil rights claim, the defendant — including police officers facing excessive force claims under the Constitution's 4th Amendment — can get off the hook by arguing that it was not "clearly established" at the time of the alleged violation that its actions were unconstitutional. If qualified immunity is granted, the lawsuit is dismissed and the plaintiffs never get a chance to either negotiate a settlement or go to trial. In 2020, a Reuters investigation found that judges wereincreasingly granting qualified immunityat the direction of the Supreme Court. The law enforcement community strongly defends the concept, saying it is needed to give officers acting in good faith the confidence to make split-second decisions, often in extremely dangerous circumstances. The Fraternal Order of Police, a national group representing law enforcement officers, did not respond to requests for comment. Floyd's killing by Derek Chauvin, a Minneapolis police officer, triggered an immediate national debate over police violence, especially against Black men. But there had already been aquiet cross-ideological effortbefore then to reform qualified immunity, backed by such strange bedfellows as the left-leaning American Civil Liberties Union and the libertarian Cato Institute. They had filed briefs at the Supreme Court hoping to persuade the justices to take a new look at the doctrine and consider amending it — or maybe ditching it altogether. For a few weeks in the summer of 2020, as racial justice protests raged, both the Supreme Court and Congress considered whether to take action. The court quickly sidestepped the issue, declining in June 2020 to heara series of casesasking for reconsideration of qualified immunity. Ten days later, the Democratic-controlled House of Representatives passed The George Floyd Justice in Policing Act, including a number of police reform measures on qualified immunity and other issues. But it ran into headwinds in the Republican-controlled Senate and lost momentum. "Republican intransigence was the real explanation there, and I don't see any reason to think that has changed for the better," said Clark Neily, a lawyer at the Cato Institute. Rep. Hank Johnson, D-Ga., who was a co-sponsor of the George Floyd legislation, said that there were plans to reintroduce it during the current Congress but that he has "no confidence" it would get any traction with Republicans controlling both chambers. "We will get to a time in this country where we will pass that legislation," he said. In the meantime, courts have continued to grant cops and other government officials qualified immunity in cases involving shocking claims: Police officers assisting a paramedic in Fresno, California,held a man in a prone positionuntil he died, even after he told them he could not breathe. Police officers in Pineville, North Carolina,fired multiple shotsat a man who was complying with their orders to drop a firearm. Prison officers at a facility in Columbia, South Carolina,failed to intervenewhen two men murdered four of their fellow inmates. However, there have been small signs of incremental change. Some judges have criticized the way qualified immunity has been applied, joining a handful who had done the same before 2020. That approach has seeped into some recent rulings, those following the case law say. Chris Balch, a lawyer in Georgia who represents police departments in such cases, said the thumb on the scale in favor of officers "has lessened in the last five years," meaning defense lawyers need to be ready to go to trial. He cited aJanuary 2024 rulingby the Atlanta-based 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals that denied qualified immunity to a jail intake officer after a Black inmate who had disclosed he stabbed a white man for racially motivated reasons then murdered his white cellmate. There was also a glimmer of hope for reform advocates at the Supreme Court, which in November 2020ruled in favorof a Texas prison inmate who had been held in filthy conditions. The justices overturned a lower court that said qualified immunity protected prison officials. After reform efforts failed in Congress, there was briefly a concerted effort to enact state-level legislation that would create an alternative way to sue officers under those states' laws, making qualified immunity unavailable as a defense. Although ahandful of statesenacted such laws, the campaign met withconsiderable resistanceelsewhere. More recently, President Donald Trump's re-election has in some ways sent the pendulum swinging in the other direction in the national political arena. When Trump signed apro-law enforcement executive orderlast month, he stressed the importance of ensuring officers are not held legally accountable for their actions. The order says the Trump administration will take action to "provide legal resources and indemnification to law enforcement officers who unjustly incur expenses and liabilities" and calls on officials to "strengthen and expand legal protections" for officers. Harrison Fields, a White House spokesman, said Trump's policing plan shows he is "fulfilling his campaign promise to Make America Safe Again." The administration is committed to reversing "failed policies" backed by Democrats, he added. With that political environment in mind, Blum, the qualified immunity critic, remains pessimistic there will be any major change any time soon. "Qualified immunity is here to stay," she said.

Five years after George Floyd's death, calls to reform qualified immunity mostly fall silent

Five years after George Floyd's death, calls to reform qualified immunity mostly fall silent WASHINGTON — The death of George Floyd at t...
Rubio to face tough questions on Trump policies in CongressNew Foto - Rubio to face tough questions on Trump policies in Congress

By Patricia Zengerle and Daphne Psaledakis WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio will testify this week before his former colleagues in the U.S. Congress, some of whom have said they regret voting to confirm the ex-senator because he has not stood up to President Donald Trump. The Senate voted 99-0 to confirm the Florida Republican senator as the nation's highest diplomat on January 20, as Democrats joined Trump's Republicans in giving the president his first permanent second-term cabinet member just hours after Trump was sworn in. During his friendly Senate Foreign Relations Committee confirmation hearing on January 15, Rubio promised a robust foreign policy focused on American interests, echoing Trump's "America First" approach to global affairs. Some Democrats who backed Rubio in January have said they regret their votes, as Trump has seized more control of the federal government than any modern president, including cutting funding plans that had been approved by Congress. At the hearing, Rubio is likely to face tough questions about the decimation of foreign aid - Rubio was an advocate of such aid during his 14 years in the Senate - while slashing staff at the State Department and U.S. Agency for International Development, which is being folded into the State Department. Senators are also likely to grill Rubio on Trump's plans to unwind Syria sanctions, Rubio's role in the administration's immigration crackdown, the delivery of humanitarian assistance to Palestinians in Gaza and efforts to end the war in Ukraine. He may also face some questions over Trump's suggestions that Canada could become the 51st U.S. state and that the U.S. could acquire Greenland, which have angered some close U.S. allies. COMPETITION WITH CHINA U.S. Senator Jeanne Shaheen of New Hampshire, the top Democrat on the foreign relations committee, said the administration's policies had made it more difficult to compete with China, noting that Beijing is increasing its spending on diplomacy and providing humanitarian aid in areas where the U.S. abruptly terminated programs. "Beijing is making the case that they are a more reliable, supportive partner than the United States," Shaheen said in remarks prepared for the hearing. Rubio has long been known as a China hawk. A few Democrats, including foreign relations committee members Chris Murphy of Connecticut and Chris Van Hollen of Maryland, have said publicly their votes to confirm Rubio were a mistake. Republicans on the other hand have praised Rubio, who has become a crucial figure in the Trump administration. He currently is secretary of state and Trump's acting national security adviser, as well as administrator of the U.S. Agency for International Development and the acting archivist of the United States. Rubio is the first person since Henry Kissinger in the 1970s to hold the positions of secretary of state and national security adviser simultaneously. "When I have a problem, I call up Marco. He gets it solved," Trump said earlier this month. On Tuesday, Rubio will testify before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee at 10 a.m. EDT (1400 GMT), and the Senate Appropriations Committee's State and Foreign Operations subcommittee at 2 p.m. EDT. On Wednesday, he is due to testify before the House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee at 10 a.m. EDT and the House Appropriations subcommittee on State, Foreign Operations and Related Programs at 2 p.m. EDT. (Reporting by Patricia Zengerle, Daphne Psaledakis and Simon Lewis; Editing by Don Durfee and Stephen Coates)

Rubio to face tough questions on Trump policies in Congress

Rubio to face tough questions on Trump policies in Congress By Patricia Zengerle and Daphne Psaledakis WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. Secretary...
13 years after setting a beloved Texas grandma on fire, Matthew Johnson will be executedNew Foto - 13 years after setting a beloved Texas grandma on fire, Matthew Johnson will be executed

Exactly 13 years ago on Tuesday,Nancy Judith Harrisunknowingly clocked in for the last time at the Fina Whip-In convenience where she worked in a Dallas suburb. The beloved grandmother was attacked during a robbery on May 20, 2012, and left the store in an ambulance, suffering from severe burns all over her body. The robber had poured lighter fluid over her head and set her on fire. Five days later, she succumbed to the burns and was taken off life support. She was 76. Now Texas is set to execute Harris' convicted killer, Matthew Lee Johnson, bylethal injectionon Tuesday, May 20. If the execution moves forward, Johnson will be thefourth inmate executed in Texas this yearand the18th in the nation. Also Tuesday,Indiana executed an inmatejust after midnight: Benjamin Ritchie for the murder of police Officer Bill Toney. That makes Johnson's execution the second of the day in the U.S. Johnson has never claimed innocence and his trial attorney told USA TODAY that he is "extremely remorseful" for Harris' murder. Here's what you need to know about the execution. Nancy Judith Harris:Beloved Texas grandma followed all her robber's demands. Then he set her on fire. Johnson, 50, is set to be executed by lethal injection after 6 p.m. CT on Tuesday, May 20 at the Huntsville Unit just north of Houston. On the morning of May 20, 2012, Harris was working as a clerk at the convenience store Fina Whip-In in Garland, Texas, a Dallas suburb. Johnson walked into the store and behind the sales counter. He then poured lighter fluid over Harris' head as she tried to open the cash register, court documents say. Johnson then took two lighters from a display, two packs of cigarettes and removed a ring from Harris' finger. Once Harris finally got the register open, Johnson took all of the cash and then lit Harris on fire. Court documents say that Harris, engulfed in flames, ran to a nearby sink to try to put them out. At the same time, Johnson "calmly" walked out of the convenience store, stopping to grab some candy, court documents say. Unable to put out the fire, Harris walked outside and yelled for help. Two police officers, a firefighter and a paramedic responded, extinguishing Harris and taking her to a hospital by ambulance. Harris sustained second- to fourth-degree burns over 40% of her body, including her face, arms, hands, legs and chest. On May 25, 2012, Harris was taken off life support and passed away. She left behind four sons, John, Bryan, Scot and Chris. Bryan passed away at the age of 64 in February. After leaving the Fina Whip-In, Johnson ran throughout the neighborhood behind the convenience store, shedding his clothing. By the time officers caught him that morning, Johnson asked, according to court records: "What took you so long? Y'all are getting slow." A devoted grandma and avid Dallas Cowboys fan, Harris would "give you the shirt off her back," Elizabeth Harris, Nancy's daughter-in-law, told USA TODAY. For several years up until her death, Harris spent Friday afternoons doting on her three granddaughters, Lorelai, Hannah and Olivia Harris, who are now 23, 21 and 18. They bought trinkets at Dollar Tree, ate at McDonald's and played for hours back at Harris' house. They called them "Nini Days," based on the nickname the girls had for Harris. "She loved it. The girls loved it," Elizabeth said. Around the time Elizabeth and Harris' son Chris got married in 2000, Harris had a health scare, and doctors told her she needed to cut down on sodium. Initially, Harris tried to cut out all salt. "(She) just wanted to make sure she was there to watch the kids graduate and get married and all of the things," Elizabeth said. "She took it seriously when they (doctors) told her, 'You need to take care of your health.' After that, she was as healthy as humanly possible so that she could be there for her grandkids and her family." A Dallas native, Johnson spent the majority of his childhood unsupervised, raised largely by his two older brothers and cousins, who introduced him to marijuana at the age of 7, according to Johnson's clemency petition. In middle school, Johnson began using crack cocaine and PCP. At 19, Johnson married his wife Daphne and initially, was able to hide his drug use from her, the Johnson's clemency petition said. But before long, his drug addiction became "quite serious," and one time, Johnson's friend had to "hogtie" him to his bed because of his manic behavior, the petition said. In his mid-20s, Johnson sought addiction treatment, but he quickly relapsed. In 2004, Johnson was sentenced to five years of prison for a robbery while on drugs. In prison, Johnson became sober and Daphne recalled that her husband's mood became "upbeat" and he enrolled in a parenting class, according to his clemency petition. Johnson was released from prison in 2009 and remained sober for several years. He found solace in working out and fishing to calm himself down, he and Daphne had a third child, and he got a promotion at his job at an auto garage, according to the petition. But in 2011, the Johnsons purchased their first home and shortly after, Daphne lost her job, according to the petition. The financial strain proved too much and Johnson relapsed again. "Within months, the progress he had made toward sobriety and improving his life had vanished, as Johnson sunk to a point lower than ever before," his clemency petition said. "It was during this time that he killed Nancy Harris." Since being on Death Row, Johnson has completed a faith-based program and become as active in his wife and daughters' lives as possible, the petition said. "While not able to be physically present, he tries his best to help influence his daughters to make better choices and not follow a path like this," the petition said. Media witnessing Johnson's execution will include the Associated Press, Huntsville Item and The Dallas Morning News, the Texas Department of Criminal Justice told USA TODAY. Elizabeth said that she and her husband Chris will be among the witnesses to Johnson's execution, as will Harris' other two living sons, Scot and John, and Scot's daughter Shelby. "It is just to the point where ... we're just tired and we just want it to be over with and done with," Elizabeth said. "The truth of the matter is, there's no such thing as as 'healing.' You don't heal. Days get easier, but there's no day where it's totally healed." Contributing: Nick Penzenstadler Greta Cross is a national trending reporter at USA TODAY. Story idea? Email her atgcross@usatoday.com. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Matthew Lee Johnson set to be executed today in Texas. What to know

13 years after setting a beloved Texas grandma on fire, Matthew Johnson will be executed

13 years after setting a beloved Texas grandma on fire, Matthew Johnson will be executed Exactly 13 years ago on Tuesday,Nancy Judith Harris...
Jeff Bezos & Lauren Sánchez Have Stylish Dinner Date in CannesNew Foto - Jeff Bezos & Lauren Sánchez Have Stylish Dinner Date in Cannes

Jeff BezosandLauren Sánchezstepped out for a fancy dinner date in Cannes on Sunday ... and this time it was the actual power couple, and not the doppelgängers who tricked a lot of people days ago! The high-profile duo was snapped as they made their way to the marina ... JB looking like a boss as he rocked a crisp button-down and shades, while his bride-to-be sizzled in a flirty ivory mini-dress and heels. As we previously reported, the billionaire pair made headlines after a couple who looked a heck of a lot like themstrutted down the festival red carpetfor the premiere of "Dossier 137." Even more shocking than all the legit double takes the couple got -- it's still not even clear who they were or if they were even invited ... 'cause they bailed shortly after whipping media into a frenzy. Of course, the actual couple was totally expected at the festival -- Lauren was set to receive the 2025 Global Gift Women Empowerment Award at the Global Gift Foundation charity gala. Hopefully, it's not too awkward when the actual power couple does bump into the tricksters ... and someone faints right out of an '80s sitcom.

Jeff Bezos & Lauren Sánchez Have Stylish Dinner Date in Cannes

Jeff Bezos & Lauren Sánchez Have Stylish Dinner Date in Cannes Jeff BezosandLauren Sánchezstepped out for a fancy dinner date in Cannes ...
Lorraine Bracco, 70, Reveals What Part of Her Life Changed After She Decided to Go GrayNew Foto - Lorraine Bracco, 70, Reveals What Part of Her Life Changed After She Decided to Go Gray

Mike Coppola/WireImage; Kevin Mazur/Getty for Netflix Lorraine Bracco opened up about how embracing her gray has impacted her professional and personal life TheNonnasstar, 70, has been going gray since 2020 "I am no longer a brunette and people have been very accepting to it," she said Lorraine Braccois loving the freedom of going gray. TheSopranosalum, 70, ditched box dye in 2020, during the COVID pandemic — and at first, was hesitant about the change. "I had no idea what it was going to look like," the Oscar nominee toldYahoo Lifein an interview published on Thursday, May 15, adding that her hair began to take on a "half dark, half gray, half whatever it was" look. However, once she got over the transition period, she felt "pretty lucky" about the way her hair turned out and she hasn't turned back since. Neilson Barnard/Getty The PEOPLE Appis now available in the Apple App Store! Download it now for the most binge-worthy celeb content, exclusive video clips, astrology updates and more! Bracco added that it's been a fairly easy decision to deal with in the job department. "I always tell my agent to remind these people I have gray hair. I am no longer a brunette and people have been very accepting to it," she said, before explaining that her current look worked for her role inNonnas, a Netflix film in which she plays, well, an Italian grandmother. Another benefit of her new hairstyle has been enjoying the free time that would've otherwise been spent at the hair salon "every three weeks." She added, "I feel like I have a lot of hours [back]." Todd Owyoung/NBC via Getty Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. Since saying goodbye to brunette, Bracco has not been shy about flaunting her locks on the red carpet. In January 2024, she made a beauty statement at anHBO post-Emmys eventwith her silver strands pulled back in an elegant updo. Most recently, she attended theNonnasworld premiere with her salt-and-pepper 'do styled in effortless waves. Of course, Bracco joinsa group of Hollywood women— including Jamie Lee Curtis, Diane Keaton and Andie MacDowell — who've chosen to embrace their lighter hues. Like Bracco, MacDowell, 67, made the leap during COVID, when for the first time she saw her changing roots and thought: "I would be happier."She told PEOPLE in 2022: "Eventually, I'm going to be silver. And I wanted to have this experience of feeling what it is." In August 2024, Hilarie Burton proudly proclaimed herself to be the"youngest woman in the Grey Club"at the age of 42. Kelly Ripa, whomaintains her signature blonde, once griped about a beauty malfunction that failed to cover up her graying roots. In a 2024 episode ofLive with Kelly and Mark,the talk show host lamented about an 11-hour salon session that wasn't successful in camouflaging her grays. She previously revealed that dyeing her hair takes "hours and hours." Read the original article onPeople

Lorraine Bracco, 70, Reveals What Part of Her Life Changed After She Decided to Go Gray

Lorraine Bracco, 70, Reveals What Part of Her Life Changed After She Decided to Go Gray Mike Coppola/WireImage; Kevin Mazur/Getty for Netfli...

 

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