- Posted June 24, 2013
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
Supreme Court says police chief immune

PORT SANILAC, Mich. (AP) -- A divided Michigan Supreme Court has thrown out a lawsuit against a Thumb community's police chief over an arrest at a beer tent.
The court issued a 3-2 ruling last Thursday saying that then-Port Sanilac Chief Rodney Jaskowski was immune to a civil suit when he arrested a drummer at a 2008 summer fundraiser for a volunteer fire department.
Some people in the beer tent didn't like the music, and the event's organizer called off the concert. Tom Petipren sued Jaskowski, saying the chief pushed him off the stage and arrested him.
Lower courts said Jaskowski isn't entitled to immunity under Michigan law because he was acting as an officer, not a police administrator.
But a high court majority says a chief has absolute immunity.
----------------
Online:
Ruling: http://1.usa.gov/12e6Pve
Background: http://1.usa.gov/12OI9j0
Published: Mon, Jun 24, 2013
headlines Oakland County
headlines National
- March 1, 1828: Sojourner Truth goes to court
- ACLU and BigLaw firm use ‘Orange is the New Black’ in hashtag effort to promote NY jail reform
- DOJ nominees hedge on whether court orders must always be followed
- DNA evidence in open cases explored in ABC reality series
- Which law-related films have won Oscars? You may be surprised (photo gallery)
- ‘Radical agreement’ could lead to Supreme Court victory for reverse-discrimination plaintiff