On Monday, April 5, 2014, the United States Supreme Court announced that the excessive force lawsuit filed by Washington Nationals baseball player, Robbie Tolan, was improperly dismissed by the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. In reaching this conclusion, the Supreme Court agreed with arguments presented by the NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, Inc. (LDF) in the amicus brief it filed in support of Mr. Tolan’s appeal. Specifically, the Supreme Court concluded that the lower court improperly failed to consider the evidence supporting Mr. Tolan’s excessive force claim and recognized that, contrary to the decision below, “[t]he witnesses on both sides come to this case with their own perceptions, recollections, and even potential biases.”

In its brief, LDF argued that the circumstances of Mr. Tolan’s shooting were tainted by indicia of racial bias, and these facts were not properly taken into account by the circuit court in its review of the evidence. LDF also asserted that the lower courts’ assessment of the officer’s conduct should not have ignored the influence of subconscious stereotypes which falsely associate race with criminality, aggression, and violence, and it detailed the science of implicit bias to show how it may have influenced the officer’s hyperaggressive behavior (the shooting took place 30-seconds after he arrived on the scene) as well as any evaluation of its “reasonableness.”

The case will return to the lower courts for an evaluation of the police officer’s entitlement to qualified immunity based on a proper review of all of the relevant evidence.
Jenner Block represented LDF in this amicus brief.