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Supreme Court says family can sue over wrong-house raid

The Supreme Court
Andrew Harnik
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Getty Images
The Supreme Court

A unanimous Supreme Court said a family whose house was wrongly raided by law enforcement can sue.

At issue is what law enforcement refers to as "wrong-house raids." Local, state, or, as in the case before the court, federal officers smash into a private home to find a suspect, but it's the wrong house. That's what happened to Trina Martin, her 7-year-old son Gabe, and Trina's partner, Toi Cliatt, in their Atlanta home in 2017 when they their house was wrongly raided by FBI and SWAT agents who were serving an arrest warrant for a neighbor accused of gang activity.

In 2019 the family sued the FBI and individual agents for the wrong-house raid. It's never easy to bring such cases in state court, and it is even harder in federal court. That's because the federal government is generally immune from being sued, except in certain circumstances set out by Congress. The question for the Supreme Court was whether this wrong-house raid falls within those circumstances.

The U.S. government typically benefits from "sovereign immunity," meaning it can't be sued. But Congress passed the Federal Tort Claims Act in 1946 making an exception to allow lawsuits against the federal government for harms caused by its employees. The statute was amended in 1974, partly in response to two high-profile wrong-house FBI raids.

The question for the Supreme Court is whether the statute, as amended, now allows victims to sue, period. Or can they sue only if the perpetrators of the raid were following government orders, here orders from the FBI.

The government's argument is that the FBI officers were told to go to the right home, not the home they raided, and that the FBI should not be liable for every wrong judgment call a federal officer makes in these stressful situations. In the government's view, the officers were tasked with executing a raid on the house of a "dangerous individual," and making the government pay up for the officers' mistake would undermine federal law enforcement's ability to do its job in the future.

Martin and Cliatt counter that it shouldn't matter whether the officers made this mistake, even though they were given the right address, because Congress intended for the government to be held accountable in these exact kinds of situations when it amended the statute in 1974.

The high court's 6-3 conservative majority has had plenty of chances to weigh in against these wrong-house raids. But for decades, the court has rejected several claims against law enforcement officers, making it more difficult to bring cases like this one.

On Thursday, it took a different course. Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote the opinion for the unanimous court.

Copyright 2025 NPR

NPR Washington Desk
[Copyright 2024 NPR]
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