The police officers who arrested a Black pastor while he watered his neighbor’s plants can be sued, a federal appeals court ruled Friday, reversing a lower court judge’s decision to dismiss the pastor’s lawsuit.

A three-judge panel of the 11th U.S. Court of Appeals unanimously ruled that the three officers who arrested Michael Jennings in Childersburg, Alabama, lacked probable cause for the arrest and are therefore not shielded by qualified immunity.

Qualified immunity protects officers from civil liability while performing their duties as long as their actions don’t violate clearly established law or constitutional rights which they should have known about.

Jennings was arrested in May 2022 after a white neighbor reported him to police as he was watering his friend’s garden while they were out of town. The responding officers said they arrested Jennings because he refused to provide a physical ID. Body camera footage shows that the man repeatedly told officers he was “Pastor Jennings” and that he lived across the street.

  • Flying Squid
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    63 hours ago

    That’s the sad truth. That he’s a pastor is what, for some reason, makes this unjust. If he was, say, an accountant, would this even be in the news?

    • @NatakuNox
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      72 hours ago

      They need extra reasons to think critically. There are still those that think George Floyd deserved to be killed on the street because of his criminal past and drug addiction. Or the recent executions of known innocent black men. Most white southerns and Republicans still like a good old lynching.

      • Flying Squid
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        52 hours ago

        I know. It just makes me so sad that they can’t look at a black person and recognize them as a human being. They need this extra justification.