In 2008, Manuel Espina was shot by a Prince George’s
County police officer and his family sued the county because the officer was a
local government employee. Maryland has
a law from the 1980s that limits the amount of money people can receive when
suing a local government employee to $200,000 per plaintiff or $500,000 for
claims connected to a single incident.
The Espina family is asking
Maryland’s highest court to strike down the law because their damage award
of $11.5 million was cut down to $400,000.
Other
localities in Maryland, not surprisingly, have taken the side of Prince George’s
County, arguing that “ruling in favor of the family could force local governments
to pay out millions more when officers are sued for civil rights violations.” The family’s attorneys and many civil rights
groups believe that having a cap on damages will never deter local governments
from combatting police brutality. Groups
such as the American Civil Liberties Union, the Public Justice Center, and the
Caucus of African American Leaders all filed briefs supporting the Espina
family. They believe “that larger
penalties are necessary to ensure justice in police brutality cases” and “the
cap doesn’t deter officers from repeated misconduct—especially if they escape
criminal charges over the accusations.”
The police officer involved here was not prosecuted in the killing and a
police trial board acquitted him of administrative charges.
In
Baltimore, the cap has saved taxpayers millions of dollars because since 2011,
there have been 102 civil suits alleging police brutality and other misconduct,
and yet $5.7 million has still been paid out.
Baltimore City, for example, has argued that “the cap is needed to
protect budgets and predict exposure for insurance purposes.” So
while local governments are worrying about their budgets, families of victims
of police brutality or other misconduct are limited to a few hundred thousand
dollars in damages for their loss, even when juries return multi-million dollar
damage awards. The cap has been
challenged and upheld numerous times. It
will certainly be interesting to see if the Maryland Court of Appeals holds its
ground and upholds the cap, or if this case is ripe for overturning it.
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