{"id":1098,"date":"2011-06-19T22:26:50","date_gmt":"2011-06-20T02:26:50","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.peoplevstate.com\/?p=1098"},"modified":"2011-11-13T21:20:20","modified_gmt":"2011-11-14T01:20:20","slug":"gratuitous-violence","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.peoplevstate.com\/?p=1098","title":{"rendered":"Gratuitous Violence"},"content":{"rendered":"
Jamison Koehler cites<\/a> Ashe v. Swenson<\/em><\/a> (1970) as currently his favorite U.S. Supreme Court case. In a comment on his post<\/a> I wrote: “If you like Ashe<\/em>, you might also like Yeager<\/em><\/a>. Until recently these used to be my favorite U.S. Supreme Court cases too.”<\/p>\n What recently changed my mind about these cases is the Indiana Supreme Court’s decision in Tyrus Coleman v. State<\/em><\/a> (2011), and the utter failure of these cases to do Mr. Coleman (whom I represented at trial) any good. Now when I read Yeager<\/em> the only significant thing about the case seems to me to be the fact that the defendant, Mr. Yeager, was an Enron executive.<\/p>\n The Indiana Supreme Court’s decision in Mr. Coleman’s case came less than a week after that court rendered its infamous decision in Barnes<\/em><\/a>, which purports to abrogate the right of the people to reasonably resist unlawful police entry into their homes. I lament the fact that Barnes<\/em> has gotten all the attention and public vilification, while the court’s disposal of Coleman<\/em> has gotten none, even though both cases equally exude the pernicious implication that only police officers are entitled to use force to defend themselves or others and that the only allowable recourse of a man facing<\/em> armed and dangerous men who are in the act of invading his property is to call the police.<\/p>\n In the wake of the political fallout over Barnes<\/em> the Indiana Attorney General has put on his white hat<\/a> and joined the chorus condemning Barnes<\/em>:<\/p>\n I support a rehearing of the case to allow for a more narrow ruling that would continue to recognize the individual right of reasonable resistance to unlawful entry. In our brief and argument to the Indiana Supreme Court last fall, my office did not advocate for the type of ruling the Court issued last week.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n Here’s my response to that, borrowing from Eric Turkewitz<\/a>: “Go shit in your white hat and pull it down over your ears.” Your office didn’t have to petition the Indiana Supreme Court for transfer after the Indiana Court of Appeals rendered its eminently reasonable decision that would have freed Tyrus Coleman — an innocent man — on the grounds of collateral estoppel, but it did.<\/p>\n