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Appellate Practice,
Law Practice

Jul. 25, 2022

Interfering with a police officer does not preclude all claims of excessive force

Where, as here, the underlying factual context can be abstracted as one or four factual contexts, the analysis bends toward the determination being properly considered a factual, not legal issue, rightly for a jury.

Robert L. Bastian Jr.

Partner
Bastian & Dini

9025 Wilshire Blvd, Penthouse
Beverly Hills , CA 90211

Phone: (310) 789-1955

Fax: (310) 822-1989

Email: robbastian@aol.com

Whittier Law School

See more...

When does a conviction for interfering with a police officer preclude a subsequent civil lawsuit for excessive force, when both arise from related underlying facts?

It is an important question for three reasons. First, even if someone has criminally interfered with an officer, it does not justify officers using disproportionate force in subsequently making the arrest.

Second, such charges are too often pretextua...

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