CA11: Police shooting and hitting a car is a 4A seizure

Police shooting at and hitting a car is a Fourth Amendment seizure, drawing from a common law case that striking a horse is the same as striking the rider. Watkins v. Davis, 2025 U.S. App. LEXIS 24904 (11th Cir. Sep. 25, 2025):

We see no material difference from an officer’s bullet that strikes the car of a person driving it. Of course, we don’t see many horse-drawn carriages anymore. But that’s so because cars took their place. So if touching a carriage or the horse drawing it counted as the “force” necessary to effect a seizure of the rider inside the carriage, then touching a car with a driver inside it also amounts to the “force” necessary to effect a seizure of the driver. And because Torres teaches that touching with a bullet is the same thing as touching with a hand, the Officers’ shots that hit Watkins’s car were the necessary “force” to satisfy the first requirement of effecting a seizure under the Fourth Amendment.

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