Show pageBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ====== Tennessee v. Garner: The Ultimate Guide to Police Use of Deadly Force ====== **LEGAL DISCLAIMER:** This article provides general, informational content for educational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional legal advice from a qualified attorney. Always consult with a lawyer for guidance on your specific legal situation. ===== What is Tennessee v. Garner? A 30-Second Summary ===== Imagine a police officer chasing a suspect through a dark backyard. For centuries, the law was brutally simple: if the person was suspected of a felony—any felony, from murder to burglary—and they ran, the officer could shoot to stop them. This was known as the "fleeing felon" rule. It was a holdover from an era of limited technology, where a suspect who escaped was likely gone forever. But in the modern age, this rule led to tragedies. One such tragedy, involving a 15-year-old boy and a stolen $10 bill, reached the [[u.s._supreme_court]] and fundamentally changed the rules of engagement between police and the public forever. The 1985 case of **Tennessee v. Garner** is the single most important legal decision defining when a law enforcement officer can use deadly force. It acts as a constitutional brake pedal, stopping police from using their most extreme power unless a very high-risk situation justifies it. The Court ruled that shooting a fleeing person is the ultimate "seizure" of that person, and for that seizure to be legal under the [[fourth_amendment]], it must be reasonable. This case transformed the question from "Can I legally shoot?" to "Is it absolutely necessary to shoot to protect myself or others from imminent, serious harm?" * **Key Takeaways At-a-Glance:** * **A New Constitutional Standard:** **Tennessee v. Garner** established that using deadly force to stop a fleeing suspect is a "seizure" under the [[fourth_amendment]]'s protection against unreasonable searches and seizures. * **Ending the Old Rule:** The **Tennessee v. Garner** ruling declared it unconstitutional for police to use deadly force against a non-dangerous, fleeing felony suspect. * **The Imminent Threat Test:** The ruling permits the use of deadly force only when an officer has [[probable_cause]] to believe the fleeing suspect poses a **significant threat of death or serious physical injury** to the officer or to others. ===== Part 1: The Legal Foundations of Tennessee v. Garner ===== ==== The Story of a Tragedy: A Historical Journey ==== The case of *Tennessee v. Garner* began on a fall night in 1974, in Memphis, Tennessee. Police were called to investigate a suspected burglary. When they arrived, they saw someone fleeing from the back of the house. Officer Elton Hymon shouted, "Police, halt!" The suspect, 15-year-old Edward Garner, began to climb a six-foot fence. Officer Hymon, seeing that Garner was apparently unarmed and knowing the fence would likely allow him to escape, made a split-second decision. Following his training and a Tennessee state law that codified the ancient "fleeing felon" rule, he fired his weapon, striking Garner in the back of the head. Edward Garner died on the operating table. In his pockets were a purse and ten dollars he had taken from the house. He was an eighth-grader, 5'4" tall, and weighed just over 100 pounds. Edward's father, Cleamtee Garner, filed a [[civil_rights]] lawsuit against the police department and the state, arguing that the shooting violated his son's constitutional rights. The lawsuit, brought under the federal statute `[[42_u.s.c._1983]]`, which allows people to sue government officials for rights violations, began a decade-long journey through the court system. Local courts initially sided with the police, citing the Tennessee statute. However, the case was appealed all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court, which saw the need to address a fundamental question: Does the Constitution place limits on a police officer's power to kill a fleeing suspect? The Court's answer in 1985 would send ripples through every police department in America. ==== The Law on the Books: The Fourth Amendment ==== The legal heart of *Tennessee v. Garner* is the [[fourth_amendment]] to the U.S. Constitution. It is a cornerstone of American liberty, designed to protect citizens from overreach by the government. The key text reads: > "The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against **unreasonable searches and seizures**, shall not be violated..." Before *Garner*, many legal scholars and courts didn't explicitly think of a shooting as a "seizure." A seizure was typically understood as a physical arrest or the confiscation of property. The Supreme Court's revolutionary step in *Garner* was to declare that using deadly force is the most profound and final type of seizure imaginable. **The Court's Reasoning:** When a police officer shoots a suspect, they are "seizing" that person by taking away their freedom of movement and, potentially, their life. Therefore, that seizure must be **reasonable**. The Court then weighed the government's interest (capturing a suspected felon) against the individual's interest (their own life). It concluded that shooting an unarmed, non-dangerous person simply to prevent their escape was fundamentally **unreasonable**. This single interpretation changed the legal landscape overnight. ==== A Nation of Contrasts: From Fleeing Felon to Imminent Threat ==== The *Garner* decision created a new national standard, forcing states and local police departments to abandon laws and policies that were suddenly unconstitutional. The table below illustrates the dramatic shift. ^ Jurisdiction ^ Pre-Garner "Fleeing Felon" Rule ^ Post-Garner "Imminent Threat" Standard ^ | **Tennessee (At the time of the case)** | A state statute explicitly allowed officers to use "all the necessary means to effect the arrest" of a fleeing felon. This was interpreted to include deadly force for any felony, regardless of danger. | **What This Means for You:** Before 1985, a person suspected of burglary in Tennessee could be legally shot while fleeing. After *Garner*, this was unconstitutional unless the person was armed or otherwise posed a grave threat. | | **Common Law States (e.g., Texas)** | Relied on the traditional English [[common_law]] rule, which permitted deadly force to stop any fleeing felon. This rule originated when all felonies were punishable by death. | **What This Means for You:** The Supreme Court's ruling overrode these old common law traditions. Police in Texas had to adopt the new, stricter standard, requiring specific justification for using deadly force. | | **Reform States (e.g., California)** | Some states had already begun to move away from the broad rule, limiting deadly force to "forcible and atrocious" felonies through their own state laws or court rulings. | **What This Means for You:** *Garner* affirmed the direction these states were already heading and made it the mandatory minimum standard for the entire country, providing a constitutional floor of protection for all citizens. | | **Federal Law Enforcement (e.g., FBI)** | Federal agencies had their own internal policies, but the *Garner* decision provided a clear constitutional boundary that all federal, state, and local law enforcement must follow. | **What This Means for You:** The ruling ensures a uniform basic standard of rights, whether you encounter a local police officer, a state trooper, or an FBI agent. | ===== Part 2: Deconstructing the Core Elements of the Ruling ===== The Supreme Court's decision in *Tennessee v. Garner* is not just a simple "yes" or "no." It's a nuanced framework for analyzing one of the most difficult decisions a person can make. Let's break down its key components. ==== The Anatomy of the Garner Rule: Key Components Explained ==== === Element: Deadly Force as a 'Seizure' === This is the foundational concept. The Court established that whenever a law enforcement officer "restrains the freedom of a person to walk away, he has seized that person." A shooting, which is intended to stop and apprehend a suspect, is the ultimate form of such restraint. By classifying it as a seizure, the Court brought police shootings under the direct authority of the [[fourth_amendment]] and its "reasonableness" requirement. * **Hypothetical Example:** An officer uses a Taser on a resisting individual. This is a seizure. An officer tackles a fleeing suspect. This is a seizure. An officer fires a warning shot into the air. This is *not* a seizure of a person. An officer shoots and wounds a fleeing suspect. This is absolutely a seizure. The *Garner* logic applies to any use of force intended to terminate a person's movement. === Element: The Probable Cause Requirement === The ruling introduced a two-part [[probable_cause]] test. It's not enough for the officer to have probable cause that the person committed a crime. To use deadly force, the officer must also have probable cause to believe something more: 1. **That the suspect poses a significant threat of death or serious physical injury to the officer or others.** This is a forward-looking assessment. The officer must have a reasonable belief, based on the facts available at that moment, that this person is dangerous if allowed to escape. * **Relatable Example:** An officer is chasing a man who just robbed a convenience store. * **Scenario A:** The suspect is seen with a gun during the robbery and is running toward a crowded public park. The officer has probable cause to believe he is a danger to others. * **Scenario B:** The suspect dropped the gun, is unarmed, and is running down an empty alleyway at 3 a.m. The officer has probable cause that he committed the robbery, but under *Garner*, likely lacks probable cause to believe he is an *imminent threat* to anyone else. === Element: The Imminent Threat Standard === This is the heart of the *Garner* test. "Imminent threat" means a danger that is immediate and about to happen. A vague or future threat is not enough. The danger must be clear and present. The Supreme Court gave a clear example in its ruling: > "Where the officer has probable cause to believe that the suspect poses a threat of serious physical harm, either to the officer or to others, it is not constitutionally unreasonable to prevent escape by using deadly force." This standard forces officers to evaluate the specific actions and capabilities of the suspect. Is the suspect armed? Have they made threats? Have they just committed a violent crime? These are the questions an officer must process in a matter of seconds. === Element: The Necessity of Deadly Force === A crucial, often overlooked part of the ruling is the idea of necessity. Deadly force is a last resort. The Court stated it may be used "if, where feasible, some warning has been given." This implies that if there are other, less lethal means to capture the suspect without creating undue risk, they should be used. If the suspect is cornered or can be safely apprehended later, deadly force is not necessary. ==== The Players on the Field: Who's Who in a Use-of-Force Case ==== * **The Suspect/Decedent:** The individual against whom force is used. In a civil lawsuit, if the person is killed, their family (the "estate") can bring a case on their behalf, as Cleamtee Garner did for his son. * **The Law Enforcement Officer(s):** The government agent(s) who used the force. Their actions, perceptions, and training are at the center of any legal analysis. They are often the defendants in a lawsuit. * **The Government Agency:** The police department, sheriff's office, or federal agency that employs the officer. The agency is also typically named as a defendant, as the lawsuit may allege failures in training, policy, or supervision. * **The Courts:** From the initial trial court to the Supreme Court, judges are responsible for interpreting the *Garner* standard and applying it to the specific facts of each case. They decide whether an officer's actions were "reasonable" under the [[fourth_amendment]]. * **Civil Rights Attorneys:** Lawyers who represent individuals or their families, arguing that their constitutional rights were violated. They use cases like *Garner* as the legal basis for their lawsuits. ===== Part 3: Your Practical Playbook: What Garner Means Today ===== The *Garner* decision is not an abstract legal theory; it has profound, real-world consequences for everyone. === Step 1: For the Average Citizen - Understanding Your Rights === *Tennessee v. Garner* establishes a constitutional boundary on police power. It means that the government cannot use lethal force against you simply for fleeing from the scene of a non-violent crime. - **Your Right to Be Free from Unreasonable Seizure:** This is your core protection. It means police must justify the use of any force, especially deadly force, as reasonable under the circumstances. - **The Standard for All Encounters:** While *Garner* deals with the ultimate use of force, its "reasonableness" standard influences how all levels of force are judged. An officer cannot use excessive force to arrest you even if you are not fleeing. - **What to Do:** In any encounter with law enforcement, your goal should be to remain calm and comply with lawful orders. Arguing about the legality of a stop on the street is dangerous and unproductive. The place to assert your rights under *Garner* is in a courtroom, not in a tense confrontation. === Step 2: For Law Enforcement Officers - A New Standard of Conduct === The *Garner* decision fundamentally changed police training and departmental policies across the nation. - **Shift from "Authority" to "Justification":** The old rule gave officers broad authority. The new rule requires specific, articulable justification. Every use-of-force report following a shooting will have a section where the officer must explain *why* they believed the suspect posed an imminent threat. - **Emphasis on De-escalation:** While not explicitly required by *Garner*, the ruling's logic has pushed modern policing toward de-escalation training. If deadly force is only justified when necessary, then finding ways to make it unnecessary is a primary goal. - **The Legal and Psychological Burden:** The decision to use deadly force is the most difficult one an officer can make. *Garner* and its successor cases place the burden on the officer to show their actions were reasonable in a moment of extreme stress and danger. === Step 3: After a Police Shooting - The Legal Aftermath === When a shooting occurs, a multi-layered investigation begins, and the *Garner* standard is the lens through which every action is viewed. - **The Investigation:** There are typically two parallel investigations: a criminal investigation (to see if the officer broke the law) and an internal affairs investigation (to see if the officer violated department policy). - **The Prosecutor's Decision:** The local District Attorney or a state prosecutor will review the evidence from the criminal investigation to decide whether to file charges like `[[manslaughter]]` or `[[murder]]` against the officer. They will ask: Did the officer have probable cause to believe the suspect was an imminent threat? - **The Civil Lawsuit:** Regardless of the criminal outcome, the family of the deceased can file a `[[wrongful_death]]` and [[civil_rights]] lawsuit, as the Garner family did. Here, the legal standard is lower than in a criminal case. The family's attorney must prove it was "more likely than not" that the officer's actions were unreasonable under the [[fourth_amendment]]. However, they often face a major legal hurdle called `[[qualified_immunity]]`, a doctrine that protects government officials from liability unless they violated a "clearly established" right. ===== Part 4: The Legacy of Garner: Subsequent Cases and Refinements ===== *Tennessee v. Garner* was a foundational case, but it wasn't the last word. The Supreme Court has since clarified and expanded on its principles. ==== Case Study: Graham v. Connor (1989) ==== * **The Backstory:** Dethorne Graham, a diabetic, was having an insulin reaction. He asked a friend to drive him to a convenience store for orange juice. He rushed in and out quickly, raising the suspicion of a police officer. The officer stopped the car, and in the ensuing confusion, Graham was injured as officers forcefully restrained him, believing he was drunk or on drugs. * **The Legal Question:** What standard should be used to judge whether police force is "excessive"? * **The Court's Holding:** The Supreme Court created the "objective reasonableness" standard. The Court said that the reasonableness of a particular use of force must be judged from the **perspective of a reasonable officer on the scene, rather than with the 20/20 vision of hindsight.** This requires considering that officers must often make split-second judgments in tense, uncertain, and rapidly evolving situations. * **Impact on an Ordinary Person:** This ruling is critical. It means a use-of-force case isn't judged by what a citizen sitting comfortably at home thinks. It's judged by what a hypothetical "reasonable officer" would have done with the same information and under the same stressful conditions. The Court laid out three key "Graham Factors" to consider: * The severity of the crime at issue. * Whether the suspect poses an immediate threat to the safety of the officers or others. * Whether the suspect is actively resisting arrest or attempting to evade arrest by flight. ==== Case Study: Scott v. Harris (2007) ==== * **The Backstory:** A deputy initiated a traffic stop for speeding, but the driver, Victor Harris, fled, leading to a high-speed chase that reached over 100 mph and endangered many other motorists. To end the chase, Deputy Timothy Scott rammed Harris's car, causing it to crash. Harris was rendered a quadriplegic. * **The Legal Question:** Does ramming a fleeing motorist's car to end a dangerous high-speed chase constitute an unreasonable seizure? * **The Court's Holding:** The Court said no. Applying the "objective reasonableness" test from *Graham*, the justices (who famously watched a video of the chase) concluded that Harris's dangerous driving posed a significant and immediate risk to the public. They ruled that the officer's action of ramming the car was a reasonable way to eliminate that threat, even though it carried a high risk of injury to the driver. * **Impact on an Ordinary Person:** This case demonstrates that the *Garner* and *Graham* rules are not limited to firearms. They apply to all types of force. It shows that the "imminent threat" can be to the general public, not just a specific person, and that police are given leeway to use potentially deadly force to stop a clear and present danger to innocent bystanders. ===== Part 5: The Future of Deadly Force Jurisprudence ===== The principles laid out in *Tennessee v. Garner* are still at the center of a fierce national debate about policing, accountability, and justice. ==== Today's Battlegrounds: Qualified Immunity and Police Reform ==== The most significant controversy related to *Garner* today is the doctrine of `[[qualified_immunity]]`. Critics argue that this legal shield has become nearly absolute, making it incredibly difficult for victims of excessive force to win civil lawsuits. Even if an officer's actions seem to violate the spirit of *Garner*, a court might grant them immunity if there isn't a prior court case with nearly identical facts that "clearly established" the conduct was illegal. This has led to widespread calls for reform or outright abolition of qualified immunity, with advocates arguing it prevents accountability and justice. The Black Lives Matter movement has brought intense public scrutiny to police use of force, often citing cases that seem to conflict with the core principles of *Garner*. This has fueled legislative efforts at the state and federal levels to create stricter use-of-force statutes that go beyond the constitutional minimum set by the Supreme Court. ==== On the Horizon: How Technology and Society are Changing the Law ==== * **Body Cameras:** The widespread adoption of body-worn cameras is changing the legal landscape. The "objective reasonableness" standard from *Graham* was created when the only accounts of an incident were from the officer and witnesses. Now, video evidence can provide a more objective, second-by-second record. This can either fully support an officer's account or directly contradict it, making the legal analysis more fact-intensive than ever before. * **Less-Lethal Weapons:** The development and proliferation of tools like Tasers, pepper ball launchers, and other "less-lethal" technologies add a new layer to the *Garner* analysis. The "necessity" element of the ruling becomes more pronounced. If an officer has a viable, effective, and safer alternative to a firearm, the decision to use deadly force may be deemed less reasonable. * **De-escalation as a Standard:** Society's expectations are shifting. There is a growing demand for police to be trained not just in how to use force, but in how to avoid it. A future court could one day rule that the "reasonableness" of a use of force depends in part on whether the officer took available opportunities to de-escalate the situation before it turned violent. ===== Glossary of Related Terms ===== * `[[42_u.s.c._1983]]`: A federal law that allows private citizens to sue government officials for violations of their constitutional rights. * `[[civil_rights]]`: The fundamental rights and freedoms guaranteed to individuals by the Constitution and federal laws. * `[[common_law]]`: A body of unwritten laws based on legal precedents established by the courts. * `[[deadly_force]]`: Force that is likely to cause, or that a person knows or should know would create a substantial risk of causing, death or serious bodily harm. * `[[fourth_amendment]]`: The part of the U.S. Constitution that protects people from unreasonable searches and seizures by the government. * `[[graham_v_connor]]`: The Supreme Court case that established the "objective reasonableness" standard for all police use-of-force claims. * `[[manslaughter]]`: The unlawful killing of a human being without malice or premeditation. * `[[murder]]`: The unlawful killing of a human being with "malice aforethought," meaning it was premeditated or done with extreme recklessness. * `[[objective_reasonableness]]`: The legal standard used to judge a police officer's use of force, based on what a reasonable officer would have done in the same situation. * `[[probable_cause]]`: A reasonable basis, based on facts and circumstances, for believing a crime has been committed or that a certain person has committed a crime. * `[[qualified_immunity]]`: A legal doctrine that shields government officials from being sued for discretionary actions performed within their official capacity, unless their conduct violates "clearly established" statutory or constitutional rights. * `[[seizure_(legal)]]`: Under the Fourth Amendment, a government action that meaningfully interferes with an individual's possessory interests in their property or person. * `[[u.s._supreme_court]]`: The highest federal court in the United States, with final appellate jurisdiction over all federal and state court cases involving issues of federal law. * `[[wrongful_death]]`: A type of lawsuit brought by the survivors of a person who has died as a result of the negligent or wrongful act of another person. ===== See Also ===== * `[[fourth_amendment]]` * `[[qualified_immunity]]` * `[[excessive_force]]` * `[[miranda_rights]]` * `[[civil_rights_act_of_1964]]` * `[[search_warrant]]` * `[[stop_and_frisk]]`