Consider This from NPR - Do federal agents have 'absolute immunity?'
Episode Date: January 15, 2026Vice President J.D. Vance says the ICE officer who shot and killed Renee Macklin Good last week has "absolute immunity." Some legal experts have pushed back.For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This,... sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org. Email us at considerthis@npr.org.This episode was produced by Kathryn Fink. It was edited by Christopher Intagliata. Our executive producer is Sami Yenigun.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Protests have erupted all across Minneapolis.
This is after an immigration and customs enforcement officer fatally shot a 37-year-old woman in her car last week.
Some protesters have blown whistles as they confront ICE officers.
Federal agents have responded by arresting some demonstrators, tackling, and tear-gassing others.
More than 2,000 federal immigration agents are now deployed in the Twin Cities area, with hundreds more.
expected this week. Meanwhile, the White House has continued to condemn the protests.
All weekend long, you had agitators and violent American citizens out in the streets of Minneapolis
protesting. Protesting what exactly? Speaking on Monday, White House press secretary Caroline Levitt
also went on to defend Jonathan Ross. That's the ICE officer who shot and killed Renee
Macklin Good during a confrontation with immigration agents. And this administration will continue to stand
wholeheartedly by the brave men and women of ICE, including that officer in Minneapolis,
who was absolutely justified in using self-defense.
Consider this. After last week's fatal shooting, what does accountability look like?
Can a federal agent be prosecuted? Well, we put that question to a legal scholar.
From NPR, I'm Elsa Chang.
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It's consider this.
from NPR. A federal investigation is underway after an immigration and customs enforcement officer
fatally shot a 37-year-old woman in Minneapolis last week. Meanwhile, the state of Minnesota is gathering
its own evidence about the shooting after the FBI shut the state's investigative agency out of the
case and declined to share federal evidence. As the facts of last week's deadly shooting remain
disputed, there's also disagreement about what the law is. Here's Vice President J.D. Vance
speaking from the White House last Thursday. The precedent here is very simple. You have a federal
law enforcement official engaging in federal law enforcement action. That's a federal
issue. That guy is protected by absolute immunity. He was doing his job. Well, some legal experts
have pushed back on that point about absolute immunity. David Cole is a law professor at
Georgetown University and the former national legal director at the American Civil Liberties
Union. Welcome. Thanks for having me. Well, thanks for being with us. I want to start with the
Vice President's comments there. Do federal agents have so-called absolute immunity at the federal
level for crimes they commit while on duty? Absolutely not. And the Vice President should know better,
having gone to law school. No one is above the law. Federal agents go into a state and start
committing crimes, including murdering people. They are liable to the state, to the state, to the
same extent as everyone else with some exceptions, but they are not absolutely immune.
Okay. Well, in the meantime, as the federal government investigates this case, as they say they're doing,
can we just bring up some words that Todd Blanche, the Justice Department's Deputy Attorney General,
has already said. He said, quote, there is currently no basis for a criminal civil rights
investigation. So I'm just a little confused. Where does that leave this federal investigation,
if they've already concluded there's no basis for a criminal civil rights investigation?
Well, I think this is a real problem.
When the government is investigating itself and when the top level of the government has made clear,
not just Todd Blanche but President Trump, that they don't want any accountability for this individual,
that they are backing this individual no matter what, you can't have a legitimate investigation.
Who's going to trust the results of the government investigating itself,
when the top folks have all said before the investigation is concluded, nothing wrong happened here.
And when we're talking about state law, a federal agent can be prosecuted for violating state law, correct?
Absolutely.
So what is happening on that level?
If the federal government's saying they're doing an investigation, what about potential violations of state law?
Well, the state has the prerogative to investigate.
ordinarily the federal government would cooperate in that investigation, but the state has the
right to investigate, the state has the right to prosecute, and the only immunity that the officer
would have is if he could demonstrate that his actions were necessary and proper to carrying
out his federal function. And, you know, I think that would be hard on the facts that we
have seen on video to say this was necessary.
Assuming that no criminal charges are eventually filed relating to this case of Renee Maclin Good, what recourse would be available under civil law?
Talk about who could file a civil complaint against any of the federal agents involved in this case.
Well, her survivors could sue the officer under a doctrine called Bivens that allows individuals to sue federal agents for violations of their constitutional rights in limited.
circumstances, but violations of the Fourth Amendment, which is what a unjustified use of force
is, have been recognized as a permissible ground for bringing a civil lawsuit against the officer.
You can also bring an action under the Federal Tort Claims Act against the federal government
itself for the action.
Okay.
Well, as we're looking ahead, as both the federal government and state officials are looking
into the killing of Renee Mackling Good, what are you going to do?
be watching for? You know, I think whenever you've got a police killing that is caught on video,
widely shared, what's most important is that it be dealt with fairly and justly. Because if people
see that government officials are able to kill citizens without accountability, you lose trust
in the law enforcement system.
And when we lose trust in law enforcement, very, very bad things happen.
One is that people can take the streets and can engage in violence themselves
because they are so outraged at the government for failing to hold its own officials accountable.
And you see that, you know, across the world.
But short of that, when they lose faith in law enforcement,
they are less likely to cooperate with law enforcement.
They are less likely to serve as jurors, as witnesses, to call the police, to engage with officers.
And the enforcement of law is largely dependent on our cooperation, not on the baton and the gun.
David Cole is a law professor at Georgetown University.
Thank you very much.
Thank you.
This episode was produced by Catherine Fink.
by Christopher Entaliata, and our executive producer is Sammy Yenikin.
It's Consider This from NPR. I'm Elsa Chang.
