KEY POINTS
  • The Supreme Court ruled in two cases that police officers were entitled to qualified immunity when they used force.
  • Qualified immunity protects officers from lawsuits unless it can be shown that they violated "clearly established" rights a reasonable person would know about.
  • One case involved an officer putting his knee on a man's back during an arrest while removing a knife from his pocket.
  • In the other case, two officers shot and killed a man after he appeared to threaten them with a hammer.
  • Police reform advocates have called for an end to qualified immunity, arguing it insulates officers from accountability for wrongdoing.
Television news photographers prepare to cover the final opinions of the current court’s term at the U.S. Supreme Court building in Washington, U.S. July 1, 2021.

The Supreme Court in two cases Monday ruled police officers were entitled to protection from being sued over their use of force against suspects.

The unsigned opinions, posted in the court's periodic list of orders, both overturned lower appellate decisions.