Shielded: How the Police Became Untouchable
by Joanna
Schwartz
An urgent and definitive examination of how the legal
system prevents accountability for police misconduct, from one of the country's
leading scholars on policing
In recent
years, the high-profile murders of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and so many
others have brought much-needed attention to the pervasiveness of police
misconduct. Yet it remains nearly impossible to hold police accountable for
abuses of power—the decisions of the Supreme Court, state and local
governments, and policy makers have, over decades, made the police all but
untouchable.
In
Shielded, University of California, Los Angeles, law professor Joanna Schwartz
exposes the myriad ways in which our legal system protects police at all costs,
with insightful analyses about subjects ranging from qualified immunity to
no-knock warrants. The product of more than two decades of advocacy and
research, Shielded is a timely and necessary investigation into why civil
rights litigation so rarely leads to justice or prevents future police
misconduct. Weaving powerful true stories of people seeking restitution for
violated rights, cutting across race, gender, criminal history, tax bracket,
and zip code, Schwartz paints a compelling picture of the human cost of our
failing criminal justice system, bringing clarity to a problem that is widely
known but little understood. Shielded is a masterful work of immediate and
enduring consequence, revealing what tragically familiar calls for “justice”
truly entail.
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