Craig v. O’Kelley
Petition for certiorari denied on April 6, 2020
Issue: (1) Whether a panel decision decided nine days before the relevant conduct in question constitutes clearly established law to deprive government officers of qualified immunity; (2) whether timing constitutes an extraordinary circumstance as articulated by Harlow v. Fitzgerald, such that a police officer may nonetheless be entitled to qualified immunity despite the law's being clearly established nine days earlier; and (3) whether the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit erred in holding that a general principle of law announced in Moore v. Pederson firmly established with the requisite degree of particularity that the officers violated clearly established law in the particular circumstances they faced.
SCOTUSblog Coverage
- Petitions of the week (Andrew Hamm, March 5, 2020)
Date | Proceedings and Orders |
---|---|
01/27/2020 | Petition for a writ of certiorari filed. (Response due March 2, 2020) |
02/19/2020 | Record requested from the U.S.C.A. 11th Circuit. |
03/02/2020 | Brief of respondents Janet O'Kelley, et al. in opposition filed. |
03/02/2020 | Brief amicus curiae of International Municipal Lawyers Association filed. |
03/17/2020 | Reply of petitioners Sheriff Donald Craig, et al. filed. |
03/18/2020 | DISTRIBUTED for Conference of 4/3/2020. |
04/06/2020 | Petition DENIED. |