CrimProf Blog: A Hidden Seizure Issue in Barnes v. Felix

CrimProf Blog: A Hidden Seizure Issue in Barnes v. Felix by Michael J.Z. Mannheimer:

But I want to address a more fundamental issue: whether this is properly thought of as a Fourth Amendment case at all.

Let’s go back to basics. The Court entered this area in Tennessee v. Garner, which presented the question whether it is a Fourth Amendment seizure to shoot a suspect while attempting to apprehend him and, if so, under what circumstances such a seizure is reasonable. The Court held that, yes, it is a seizure and that such a seizure is reasonable only where the arresting officer has probable cause to think that the suspect is a felon and would pose a danger to others if he remains at large. The Court extended this ruling in Graham v. Connor to hold that use of nondeadly force to effect a seizure is a Fourth Amendment event and that such force has to be reasonable under the totality of the circumstances. These rulings make some sense: if detaining or apprehending a suspect is a seizure, and seizures are governed by the Fourth Amendment, then the manner of detention or apprehension must be reasonable.

Back to Barnes. One way of looking at it is holistically: the entire event was a single seizure by Felix of Barnes for the latter’s purported toll violations. If that is correct, then it is hard to see how Felix can win. If we are going to consider the entire thing holistically as a single seizure, it would seem proper to ask whether the totality of Felix’s actions, including his jumping onto the doorsill and then shooting Barnes, was reasonable. Saying that the whole thing was one seizure but we are going to look only at one tiny snippet to assess reasonableness seems wildly inconsistent.

But it may be the better view to say that there were actually two seizures. The initial seizure was Felix stopping Barnes by pulling him over, and that was fully lawful. But once Barnes’s car began moving, for whatever reason, that first seizure was over. Felix then effected the second seizure by shooting Barnes dead.

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