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SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 13–1412
_________________
CITY AND COUNTY OF SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA,
et al., PETITIONERS
v.TERESA SHEEHAN
on writ of certiorari to the united states
court of appeals for the ninth circuit
[May 18, 2015]
Justice Alito delivered the opinion of the
Court.
We granted certiorari to consider two questions
relating to the manner in which San Francisco police officers
arrested a woman who was suffering from a mental illness and had
become violent. After reviewing the parties’ submissions, we
dismiss the first question as improvidently granted. We decide the
second question and hold thatthe officers are entitled to qualified
immunity because they did not violate any clearly established
Fourth Amendment rights.
I
Petitioners are the City and County of San
Francisco, California (San Francisco), and two police officers,
Sergeant Kimberly Reynolds and Officer Kathrine Holder. Respondent
is Teresa Sheehan, a woman who suffers from a schizoaffective
disorder. Because this case arises in a summary judgment posture,
we view the facts in the light most favorable to Sheehan, the
nonmoving party. See,
e.g., Plumhoff v.
Rickard, 572
U. S. ___, ___–___ (2014) (slip op., at 1–2).
In August 2008, Sheehan lived in a group home
for people dealing with mental illness. Although she shared common
areas of the building with others, she had a private room. On
August 7, Heath Hodge, a social worker who supervised the
counseling staff in the building, attempted to visit Sheehan to
conduct a welfare check. Hodge was concerned because Sheehan had
stopped taking her medication, no longer spoke with her
psychiatrist, and reportedly was no longer changing her clothes or
eating. See 743 F. 3d 1211, 1218 (CA9 2014); App. 23–24.
Hodge knocked on Sheehan’s door but received no
answer. He then used a key to enter her room and found Sheehan on
her bed. Initially, she would not respond to questions. But she
then sprang up, reportedly yelling, “Get out of here! You don’t
have a warrant! I have a knife, and I’ll kill you if I have to.”
Hodge left without seeing whether she actually had a knife, and
Sheehan slammed the door shut behind him. See 743 F. 3d, at
1218.
Sheehan, Hodge realized, required “some sort of
intervention,” App. 96, but he also knew that he would need help.
Hodge took steps to clear the building of other people and
completed an application to have Sheehan detained for temporary
evaluation and treatment. See Cal. Welf. & Inst. Code Ann.
§5150 (West 2015 Cum. Supp.) (authorizing temporary detention of
someone who “as a result of a mental health disorder, is a danger
to others, or to himself or herself, or gravely disabled”). On that
application, Hodge checked off boxes indicating that Sheehan was a
“threat to others” and “gravely disabled,” but he did not mark that
she was a danger to herself. 743 F. 3d, at 1218. He telephoned
the police and asked for help to take Sheehan to a secure
facility.
Officer Holder responded to police dispatch and
headed toward the group home. When she arrived, Holder reviewed the
temporary-detention application and spoke with Hodge. Holder then
sought assistance from Sergeant Reynolds, a more experienced
officer. After Reynolds arrived and was brought up to speed, Hodge
spoke with a nurse at the psychiatric emergency services unit at
San Francisco General Hospital who said that the hospital would be
able to admit Sheehan.
Accompanied by Hodge, the officers went to
Sheehan’s room, knocked on her door, announced who they were, and
told Sheehan that “we want to help you.” App. 36. When Sheehan did
not answer, the officers used Hodge’s key to enter the room.
Sheehan reacted violently. She grabbed a kitchen knife with an
approximately 5-inch blade and began approaching the officers,
yelling something along the lines of “I am going to kill you. I
don’t need help. Get out.”
Ibid. See also
id., at 284
(“[Q.] Did you tell them I’ll kill you if you don’t get out of
here? A. Yes”). The officers—who did not have their weapons
drawn—“retreated and Sheehan closed the door, leaving Sheehan in
her room and the officers and Hodge in the hallway.” 743
F. 3d, at 1219. The officers called for backup and sent Hodge
downstairs to let in reinforcements when they arrived.
The officers were concerned that the door to
Sheehan’s room was closed. They worried that Sheehan, out of their
sight, might gather more weapons—Reynolds had already observed
other knives in her room, see App. 228—or even try to flee through
the back window,
id., at 227. Because Sheehan’s room was on
the second floor, she likely would have needed a ladder to escape.
Fire escapes, however, are common in San Francisco, and the
officers did not know whether Sheehan’s room had such an escape.
(Neither officer asked Hodge about a fire escape, but if they had,
it seems he “probably” would have said there was one,
id.,
at 117). With the door closed, all that Reynolds and Holder knew
for sure was that Sheehan was unstable, she had just threatened to
kill three people, and she had a weapon.[
1]
Reynolds and Holder had to make a decision. They
could wait for backup—indeed, they already heard sirens. Or they
could quickly reenter the room and try to subdue Sheehan before
more time elapsed. Because Reynolds believed that the situation
“required [their] immediate attention,”
id., at 235, the
officers chose reentry. In making that decision, they did not pause
to consider whether Sheehan’s disability should be accommodated.
See 743 F. 3d, at 1219. The officers obviously knew that
Sheehan was unwell, but in Reynolds’ words, that was “a secondary
issue” given that they were “faced with a violent woman who had
already threatened to kill her social worker” and “two uniformed
police officers.” App. 235.
The officers ultimately decided that Holder—the
larger officer—should push the door open while Reynolds used pepper
spray on Sheehan. With pistols drawn, the officers moved in. When
Sheehan, knife in hand, saw them, she again yelled for them to
leave. She may also have again said that she was going to kill
them. Sheehan is “not sure” if she threatened death a second time,
id., at 284, but “concedes that it was her intent to resist
arrest and to use the knife,” 743 F. 3d, at 1220. In any
event, Reynolds began pepper-spraying Sheehan in the face, but
Sheehan would not drop the knife. When Sheehan was only a few feet
away, Holder shot her twice, but she did not collapse. Reynolds
then fired multiple shots.[
2]
After Sheehan finally fell, a third officer (who had just arrived)
kicked the knife out of her hand. Sheehan survived.
Sometime later, San Francisco prosecuted Sheehan
for assault with a deadly weapon, assault on a peace officer with a
deadly weapon, and making criminal threats. The jury acquitted
Sheehan of making threats but was unable to reach a verdict on the
assault counts, and prosecutors decided not to retry her.
Sheehan then brought suit, alleging, among other
things, that San Francisco violated the Americans with Disabilities
Act of 1990 (ADA), 104Stat. 327, 42 U. S. C. §12101
et seq., by subduing her in a manner that did not
reasonably accommodate her disability. She also sued Reynolds and
Holder in their personal capacities under Rev. Stat. §1979, 42
U. S. C. §1983, for violating her Fourth Amendment
rights. In support of her claims, she offered testimony from a
former deputy police chief, Lou Reiter, who contended that Reynolds
and Holder fell short of their training by not using practices
designed to minimize the risk of violence when dealing with the
mentally ill.
The District Court granted summary judgment for
petitioners. Relying on
Hainze v.
Richards, 207
F. 3d 795 (CA5 2000), the court held that officers making an
arrest are not required “to first determine whether their actions
would comply with the ADA before protecting themselves and others.”
App. to Pet. for Cert. 80. The court also held that the officers
did not violate the Fourth Amendment. The court wrote that the
officers “had no way of knowing whether [Sheehan] might escape
through a back window or fire escape, whether she might hurt
herself, or whether there was anyone else in her room whom she
might hurt.”
Id., at 71. In addition, the court observed
that Holder did not begin shooting until it was necessary for her
to do so in order “to protect herself” and that “Reynolds used
deadly force only after she found that pepper spray was not enough
force to contain the situation.”
Id., at 75, 76–77.
On appeal, the Ninth Circuit vacated in part.
Relevant here, the panel held that because the ADA covers public
“services, programs, or activities,” §12132, the ADA’s
accommodation requirement should be read to “to encompass ‘anything
a public entity does,’ ” 743 F. 3d, at 1232. The Ninth
Circuit agreed “that exigent circumstances inform the
reasonableness analysis under the ADA,”
ibid., but concluded
that it was for a jury to decide whether San Francisco should have
accommodated Sheehan by, for instance, “respect[ing] her comfort
zone, engag[ing] in non-threatening communications and us[ing] the
passage of time to defuse the situation rather than precipitating a
deadly confrontation.”
Id., at 1233.
As to Reynolds and Holder, the panel held that
their initial entry into Sheehan’s room was lawful and that, after
the officers opened the door for the second time, they reasonably
used their firearms when the pepper spray failed to stop Sheehan’s
advance. Nonetheless, the panel also held that a jury could find
that the officers “provoked” Sheehan by needlessly forcing that
second confrontation.
Id., at 1216, 1229. The panel further
found that it was clearly established that an officer cannot
“forcibly enter the home of an armed, mentally ill subject who had
been acting irrationally and had threatened anyone who entered when
there was no objective need for immediate entry.”
Id., at
1229. Dissenting in part, Judge Graber would have held that the
officers were entitled to qualified immunity.
San Francisco and the officers petitioned for a
writ of certiorari and asked us to review two questions. We granted
the petition. 574 U. S. ___ (2014).
II
Title II of the ADA commands that “no
qualified individual with a disability shall, by reason of such
disability, be excluded from participation in or be denied the
benefits of the services, programs, or activities of a public
entity, or be subjected to discrimination by any such entity.” 42
U. S. C. §12132. The first question on which we granted
review asks whether this provision “requires law enforcement
officers to provide accommodations to an armed, violent, and
mentally ill suspect in the course of bringing the suspect into
custody.” Pet. for Cert. i. When we granted review, we understood
this question to embody what appears to be the thrust of the
argument that San Francisco made in the Ninth Circuit, namely that
“ ‘Title II
does not apply to an officer’s
on-the-street responses to reported disturbances or other similar
incidents, whether or not those calls involve subjects with mental
disabilities, prior to the officer’s securing the scene and
ensuring that there is no threat to human life.’ ” Brief for
Appellees in No. 11–16401 (CA9), p. 36 (quoting
Hainze,
supra, at 801; emphasis added); see also Brief for Appellees
in No. 11–16401, at 37 (similar).
As San Francisco explained in its reply brief at
the certiorari stage, resolving its “question presented” “does not
require a fact-intensive ‘reasonable accommodation’ inquiry,” since
“the only question for this Court to resolve is whether any
accommodation of an armed and violent individual is reasonable or
required under Title II of the ADA.” Reply to Brief in Opposition
3.
Having persuaded us to grant certiorari, San
Francisco chose to rely on a different argument than what it
pressed below. In its brief in this Court, San Francisco focuses on
the statutory phrase “qualified individual,” §12132, and a
regulation declaring that Title II “does not require a public
entity to permit an individual to participate in or benefit from
the services, programs, or activities of that public entity when
that individual poses a direct threat to the health or safety of
others.” 28 CFR §35.139(a) (2014). Another regulation defines a
“direct threat” as “a significant risk to the health or safety of
others that cannot be eliminated by a modification of policies,
practices or procedures, or by the provision of auxiliary aids or
services.” §35.104. Putting these authorities together, San
Fran-cisco argues that “a person who poses a direct threat or
significant risk to the safety of others is not qualified for
accommodations under the ADA,” Brief for Petitioners 17. Contending
that Sheehan clearly posed a “direct threat,” San Francisco
concludes that she was therefore not “qualified” for an
accommodation.
Though, to be sure, this “qualified” argument
does appear in San Francisco’s certiorari petition, San Francisco
never hinted at it in the Ninth Circuit. The Court does not
ordinarily decide questions that were not passed on below. More
than that, San Francisco’s new argument effectively concedes that
the relevant provision of the ADA, 42 U. S. C. §12132,
may “requir[e] law enforcement officers to provide
accommodations to an armed, violent, and mentally ill suspect in
the course of bringing the suspect into custody.” Pet. for Cert. i.
This is so because there may be circumstances in which any
“significant risk” presented by “an armed, violent, and mentally
ill suspect” can be “eliminated by a modification of policies,
practices or procedures, or by the provision of auxiliary aids or
services.”
The argument that San Francisco now advances is
predicated on the proposition that the ADA governs the manner in
which a qualified individual with a disability is arrested. The
relevant provision provides that a public entity may not
“exclud[e]” a qualified individual with a disability from
“participat[ing] in,” and may not “den[y]” that individual the
“benefits of[,] the services, programs, or activities of a public
entity.” §12132. This language would apply to an arrest if an
arrest is an “activity” in which the arrestee “participat[es]” or
from which the arrestee may “benefi[t].”
This same provision also commands that “no
qualified individual with a disability shall be . . .
subjected to discrimination by any [public] entity.”
Ibid.
This part of the statute would apply to an arrest if the failure to
arrest an individual with a mental disability in a manner that
reasonably accommodates that disability constitutes
“discrimination.”
Ibid.
Whether the statutory language quoted above
applies to arrests is an important question that would benefit from
briefing and an adversary presentation. But San Fran-cisco, the
United States as
amicus curiae, and Sheehan all argue (or at
least accept) that §12132 applies to arrests. No one argues the
contrary view. As a result, we do not think that it would be
prudent to decide the question in this case.
Our decision not to decide whether the ADA
applies to arrests is reinforced by the parties’ failure to address
a related question: whether a public entity can be liable for
damages under Title II for an arrest made by its police officers.
Only public entities are subject to Title II, see,
e.g.,
Pennsylvania Dept. of Corrections v.
Yeskey, 524
U. S. 206, 208 (1998) , and the parties agree that such an
entity can be held vicariously liable for money damages for the
purposeful or deliberately indifferent conduct of its employees.
See Tr. of Oral Arg. 10–12, 22. But we have never decided whether
that is correct, and we decline to do so here, in the absence of
adversarial briefing.
Because certiorari jurisdiction exists to
clarify the law, its exercise “is not a matter of right, but of
judicial discretion.” Supreme Court Rule 10. Exercising that
discretion, we dismiss the first question presented as
improvidently granted. See,
e.g., Board of Trustees of Univ. of
Ala. v.
Garrett, 531 U. S. 356, 360, n. 1 (2001)
(partial dismissal);
Parker v.
Dugger, 498 U. S.
308, 323 (1991) (same).
III
The second question presented is whether
Reynolds and Holder can be held personally liable for the injuries
that Sheehan suffered. We conclude they are entitled to qualified
immunity.[
3]
Public officials are immune from suit under 42
U. S. C. §1983 unless they have “violated a statutory or
constitutional right that was clearly established at the time of
the challenged conduct.”
Plumhoff, 572 U. S., at ___
(slip op., at 12) (internal quotation marks omitted). An officer
“cannot be said to have violated a clearly established right unless
the right’s contours were sufficiently definite that any reasonable
official in [his] shoes would have understood that he was violating
it,”
ibid., meaning that “existing precedent . . .
placed the statutory or constitutional question beyond debate.”
Ashcroft v.
al-Kidd, 563 U. S. ___, ___ (2011)
(slip op., at 9). This exacting standard “gives government
officials breathing room to make reasonable but mistaken judgments”
by “protect[ing] all but the plainly incompetent or those who
knowingly violate the law.”
Id., at ___ (slip op., at
12).
In this case, although we disagree with the
Ninth Circuit’s ultimate conclusion on the question of qualified
immunity, we agree with its analysis in many respects. For
instance, there is no doubt that the officers did not violate any
federal right when they opened Sheehan’s door the first time. See
743 F. 3d, at 1216, 1223. Reynolds and Holder knocked on the
door, announced that they were police officers, and informed
Sheehan that they wanted to help her. When Sheehan did not come to
the door, they entered her room. This was not unconstitutional.
“[L]aw enforcement officers may enter a home without a warrant to
render emergency assistance to an injured occupant or to protect an
occupant from imminent injury.”
Brigham City v.
Stuart, 547 U. S. 398, 403 (2006) . See also
Kentucky v.
King, 563 U. S. ___, ___ (2011)
(slip op., at 6).
Nor is there any doubt that had Sheehan not been
dis-abled, the officers could have opened her door the second time
without violating any constitutional rights. For one thing,
“because the two entries were part of a single, continuous search
or seizure, the officers [were] not required to justify the
continuing emergency with respect to the second entry.” 743
F. 3d, at 1224 (following
Michigan v.
Tyler, 436
U. S. 499, 511 (1978) ). In addition, Reynolds and Holder knew
that Sheehan had a weapon and had threatened to use it to kill
three people. They also knew that delay could make the situation
more dangerous. The Fourth Amendment standard is reasonableness,
and it is reasonable for police to move quickly if delay “would
gravely endanger their lives or the lives of others.”
Warden,
Md. Penitentiary v.
Hayden, 387 U. S. 294 –299
(1967). This is true even when, judged with the benefit of
hindsight, the officers may have made “some mistakes.”
Heien
v.
North Carolina, 574 U. S. ___, ___ (2014) (slip op.,
at 5). The Constitution is not blind to “the fact that police
officers are often forced to make split-second judgments.”
Plumhoff,
supra, at ___ (slip op., at 8).
We also agree with the Ninth Circuit that after
the officers opened Sheehan’s door the second time, their use of
force was reasonable. Reynolds tried to subdue Sheehan with pepper
spray, but Sheehan kept coming at the officers until she was “only
a few feet from a cornered Officer Holder.” 743 F. 3d, at
1229. At this point, the use of potentially deadly force was
justified. See
Scott v.
Harris, 550 U. S. 372,
384 (2007) . Nothing in the Fourth Amendment barred Reynolds and
Holder from protecting themselves, even though it meant firing
multiple rounds. See
Plumhoff,
supra, at ___ (slip
op., at 11).
The real question, then, is whether, despite
these dangerous circumstances, the officers violated the Fourth
Amendment when they decided to reopen Sheehan’s door rather than
attempting to accommodate her disability. Here we come to another
problem. San Francisco, whose attorneys represent Reynolds and
Holder, devotes scant briefing to this question. Instead, San
Francisco argues almost exclusively that even if it is assumed that
there was a Fourth Amendment violation, the right was not clearly
established. This Court, of course, could decide the constitutional
question anyway. See
Pearson v.
Callahan, 555
U. S. 223, 242 (2009) (recognizing discretion). But because
this question has not been adequately briefed, we decline to do so.
See
id., at 239. Rather, we simply decide whether the
officers’ failure to accommodate Sheehan’s illness violated clearly
established law. It did not.
To begin, nothing in our cases suggests the
constitutional rule applied by the Ninth Circuit. The Ninth Circuit
focused on
Graham v.
Connor, 490 U. S. 386
(1989) , but
Graham holds only that the “ ‘objective
reasonableness’ ” test applies to excessive-force claims under
the Fourth Amendment. See
id., at 388. That is far too
general a proposition to control this case. “We have repeatedly
told courts—and the Ninth Circuit in particular—not to define
clearly established law at a high level of generality.”
al-Kidd,
supra, at ___ (citation omitted) (slip op.,
at 10); cf.
Lopez v.
Smith, 574 U. S. ___, ___
(2014) (
per curiam) (slip op., at 5). Qualified immunity is
no immunity at all if “clearly established” law can simply be
defined as the right to be free from unreasonable searches and
seizures.
Even a cursory glance at the facts of
Graham confirms just how different that case is from this
one. That case did not involve a dangerous, obviously unstable
person making threats, much less was there a weapon involved. There
is a world of difference between needlessly withholding sugar from
an innocent person who is suffering from an insulin reaction, see
Graham,
supra, at 388–389, and responding to the
perilous situation Reynolds and Holder confronted.
Graham is
a nonstarter.
Moving beyond
Graham, the Ninth Circuit
also turned to two of its own cases. But even if “a controlling
circuit precedent could constitute clearly established federal law
in these circumstances,”
Carroll v.
Carman, 574
U. S. ___, ___ (2014) (
per curiam) (slip op., at 4), it
does not do so here.
The Ninth Circuit first pointed to
Deorle
v.
Rutherford, 272 F. 3d 1272 (CA9 2001), but from the very
first paragraph of that opinion we learn that
Deorle
involved an officer’s use of a beanbag gun to subdue “an
emotionally disturbed” person who “was unarmed, had not attacked or
even touched anyone, had generally obeyed the instructions given
him by various police officers, and had not committed any serious
offense.”
Id., at 1275. The officer there, moreover,
“observed Deorle at close proximity for about five to ten minutes
before shooting him” in the face. See
id., at 1281. Whatever
the merits of the decision in
Deorle, the differences
between that case and the case before us leap from the page. Unlike
Deorle, Sheehan was dangerous, recalcitrant, law-breaking, and out
of sight.
The Ninth Circuit also leaned on
Alexander v.
City and County of San Francisco, 29 F.
3d 1355 (CA9 1994), another case involving mental illness. There,
officials from San Francisco attempted to enter Henry Quade’s home
“for the primary purpose of arresting him” even though they lacked
an arrest warrant.
Id., at 1361. Quade, in response, fired a
handgun; police officers “shot back, and Quade died from gunshot
wounds shortly thereafter.”
Id., at 1358. The panel
concluded that a jury should decide whether the officers used
excessive force. The court reasoned that the officers provoked the
confrontation because there were no “exigent circumstances”
excusing their entrance.
Id., at 1361.
Alexander too is a poor fit. As Judge
Graber observed below in her dissent, the Ninth Circuit has long
read
Alexander narrowly. See 743 F. 3d, at 1235
(Graber, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part) (citing
Billington v.
Smith, 292 F. 3d 1177 (CA9 2002)).
Under Ninth Circuit law,[
4] an
entry that otherwise complies with the Fourth Amendment is not
rendered unreasonable because it provokes a violent reaction. See
id., at 1189–1190. Under this rule, qualified immunity
necessarily applies here because, as explained above, competent
officers could have believed that the second entry was justified
under both continuous search and exigent circumstance rationales.
Indeed, even if Reynolds and Holder misjudged the situation,
Sheehan cannot “establish a Fourth Amendment violation based merely
on bad tactics that result in a deadly confrontation that could
have been avoided.”
Id., at 1190. Courts must not judge
officers with “the 20/20 vision of hindsight.’ ”
Ibid.
(quoting
Graham, 490 U. S., at 396).
When
Graham,
Deorle, and
Alexander are viewed together, the central error in the
Ninth Circuit’s reasoning is apparent. The panel majority concluded
that these three cases “would have placed any reasonable, competent
officer on notice that it is unreasonable to forcibly enter the
home of an armed, mentally ill suspect who had been acting
irrationally and had threatened anyone who entered when there was
no objective need for immediate entry.” 743 F. 3d, at 1229.
But even assuming that is true,
no precedent clearly established
that there was not “an objective need for
immediate entry” here. No matter how carefully a
reasonable officer read
Graham,
Deorle, and
Alexander beforehand, that officer could not know that
reopening Sheehan’s door to prevent her from escaping or gathering
more weapons would violate the Ninth Circuit’s test, even if all
the disputed facts are viewed in respondent’s favor. Without that
“fair notice,” an officer is entitled to qualified immunity. See,
e.g., Plumhoff, 572 U. S., at ___ (slip op., at
13).
Nor does it matter for purposes of qualified
immunity that Sheehan’s expert, Reiter, testified that the officers
did not follow their training. According to Reiter, San Francisco
trains its officers when dealing with the mentally ill to “ensure
that sufficient resources are brought to the scene,” “contain the
subject” and “respect the suspect’s “comfort zone,” “use time to
their advantage,” and “employ non-threatening verbal communication
and open-ended questions to facilitate the subject’s participation
in communication.” Brief for Respondent 7. Likewise, San
Francisco’s policy is “ ‘to use hostage negotiators’ ”
when dealing with “ ‘a suspect [who] resists arrest by
barricading himself.’ ”
Id., at 8 (quoting San
Francisco Police Department General Order 8.02, §II(B) (Aug. 3,
1994), online at http://www.sf-police.org (as visited May 14, 2015,
and available in Clerk of Court’s case file)).
Even if an officer acts contrary to her
training, however, (and here, given the generality of that
training, it is not at all clear that Reynolds and Holder did so),
that does not itself negate qualified immunity where it would
otherwise be warranted. Rather, so long as “a reasonable officer
could have believed that his conduct was justified,” a plaintiff
cannot “avoi[d] summary judgment by simply producing an expert’s
report that an officer’s conduct leading up to a deadly
confrontation was imprudent, inappropriate, or even reckless.”
Billington,
supra, at 1189
. Cf.
Saucier
v.
Katz, 533 U. S. 194, 216, n. 6 (2001) (Ginsburg, J.,
concurring in judgment) (“ ‘[I]n close cases, a jury does not
automatically get to second-guess these life and death decisions,
even though a plaintiff has an expert and a plausible claim that
the situation could better have been handled differently’ ”
(quoting
Roy v.
Inhabitants of Lewiston, 42
F. 3d 691, 695 (CA1 1994))). Considering the specific
situation confronting Reynolds and Holder, they had sufficient
reason to believe that their conduct was justified.
Finally, to the extent that a “robust consensus
of cases of persuasive authority” could itself clearly establish
the federal right respondent alleges,
al-Kidd, 563
U. S., at ___ (slip op., at 10), no such consensus exists
here. If anything, the opposite may be true. See,
e.g.,
Bates v.
Chesterfield County, 216 F. 3d 367, 372
(CA4 2000) (“Knowledge of a person’s disability simply cannot
foreclose officers from protecting themselves, the disabled person,
and the general public”);
Sanders v.
Minneapolis, 474
F. 3d 523, 527 (CA8 2007) (following
Bates, supra);
Menuel v.
Atlanta, 25 F. 3d 990 (CA11 1994)
(upholding use of deadly force to try to apprehend a mentally ill
man who had a knife and was hiding behind a door).
In sum, we hold that qualified immunity applies
because these officers had no “fair and clear warning of what the
Constitution requires.”
al-Kidd, supra, at ___
(Ken-nedy, J., concurring) (slip op., at 3). Because the qualified
immunity analysis is straightforward, we need not decide whether
the Constitution was violated by the officers’ failure to
accommodate Sheehan’s illness.
* * *
For these reasons, the first question
presented is dismissed as improvidently granted. On the second
question, we reverse the judgment of the Ninth Circuit. The case is
remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
Justice Breyer took no part in the consideration
or decision of this case.