Reason: The FBI Wrongly Raided a Georgia Family’s Home. Now Their Case Is Going to the Supreme Court.

Reason: The FBI Wrongly Raided a Georgia Family’s Home. Now Their Case Is Going to the Supreme Court. by Billy Binion (“A federal court ruled Trina Martin could not sue the government after agents burst into her home and held an innocent man at gunpoint.”):

Martin and Cliatt also sued under the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA), which allows victims of abuse to bring certain state torts against the federal government. The 11th Circuit closed off that avenue as well, ruling the suit was doomed because the FBI had “discretion” in how it prepares to carry out warrants. The judges also cited the Supremacy Clause, which supposedly ensures that states do not get in the way of executing federal law. Since the agents’ acts had “some nexus with furthering federal policy” and could “reasonably be characterized as complying with the full range of federal law,” the 11th Circuit said any claim under the FTCA could not proceed.

Yet the FTCA was revised in the 1970s to include a proviso specifically allowing victims like Martin to sue the federal government. A bipartisan group in Congress, including Sen. Rand Paul (R–Ky.), had urged the Court to take up the case for that reason.

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