Location | Year | Description | Outcome |
---|---|---|---|
New York, New York | 2020 |
In July 2021, the City of New York agreed to pay $567,500 to Tomas Medina, who had filed a complaint against the New York Police Department (NYPD) alleging that he was put in an illegal chokehold by an NYPD officer in 2018. The city will pay $562,500 and the officer will contribute $5,000 out of his own pocket. The complaint, filed with the Civilian Complaint Review Board, alleged that former detective Fabio Nunez had placed Medina in a chokehold and tased him 13 times when responding to a noise complaint. At the time, choke holds had been banned by the police department. Since beginning as an officer, Nunez has been named in several lawsuits alleging excessive force and other forms of misconduct. After attempting to have the case dismissed, a district judge ruled that the city and NYPD officials could be held liable, leading the city to settle for $567,500. |
Compensation
$567,500.00 |
Baltimore, Maryland | 2020 |
The Baltimore Police Department settled claims of race and sex-based discrimination as well as sexual harassment with Jasmin Rowlett, a Black female officer Rowlett and fellow Officer Luis Garcia were accused of fraternization by their colleagues, who also spread rumors about a relationship between the two. Rowlett also alleged that her supervisor made suggestive comments towards her. |
Compensation
$77,000.00 |
Denver, Colorado | 2020 |
New settlement to limit use of non-lethal weapons by Denver Police Department. In June 2020, the City of Denver agreed to limit the use of non-lethal weapons, such as tear-gas, flashbangs, and rubber bullets, in order to settle a pair of lawsuits stemming from protests against police misconduct during the summer. The lawsuits alleged that members of the Denver Police Department misused non-lethal weapons during Denver’s George Floyd protests. A federal judge issued a temporary restraining order on the activity, but the order was set to expire in a few days. Prior to the order’s expiration, the city announced an agreement to limit violent police responses to protests. The new agreement requires that only police sergeants or above can approve the use of force and all officers must actively use body cameras when interacting with protestors, among other things. |
Policy changes |
Atlantic City, New Jersey | 2020 |
Antoine Jones and Brian Wilson alleged that they were racially profiled during a traffic stop in which they were repeatedly threatened with violence by an officer with the Atlantic City Police Department. Neither Jones nor Wilson were charged with any traffic violations after their encounter with police. The officers involved in the incident have both been involved in past incidents of misconduct. |
Compensation
Undisclosed |
King County, Washington | 2020 |
King County officials agreed to pay MiChance Dunlap-Gittens’ family $2.75 million in connection with the 2017 fatal police shooting of the 17-year-old. The lawsuit also spurred new policy initiatives with the King County Sheriff’s Office, which now requires officers to use body and dashboard cameras. Dunlap-Gittens was shot seven times by officers in a failed sting operation concerning alcohol. |
Compensation
$2,500,000.00 |
Boulder, Colorado | 2020 |
Zayd Atkinson is a Black university student who was asked for identification by police to prove that he lived at his home while taking out his own trash. The City of Boulder approved a $125,000 payment to Atkinson in 2020. The officer who confronted Atkinson resigned from the Boulder Police Department, and the Department enhanced oversight in response to national media coverage of the incident. |
Compensation
$125,000.00 |
Buffalo, New York | 2020 |
Wilson Morales was 17 years old when he was shot by a Buffalo police officer and paralyzed from the chest down during a car chase. This settlement is one of the largest in the city’s history. Officers claimed that they feared Morales was trying to back his van into them when he reversed off a curb during the chase when the shooting occurred. |
Compensation
$4,500,000.00 |
Naperville, Illinois | 2020 |
Naperville, Illinois | Naperville, Illinois government officials approved a $430,000 payment to Frances Reitz to settle a lawsuit concerning police excessive use of force. The lawsuit stems from a police encounter alleging that Naperville police officers violently detained Reitz, by throwing her to the ground, without cause. Under the agreement Reitz will drop the lawsuit against the city, and the settlement is not an “admission of liability.” |
Compensation
$430,000.00 |
Milwaukee, Wisconsin | 2020 |
NBA Player Sterling Brown agreed to a $750,000 settlement to drop his lawsuit against the Milwaukee Police Department. The lawsuit and settlement stems from a 2018 encounter Brown had with the police. Brown alleged that police used excessive force when they detained Brown for parking in a handicapped spot and proceeded to wrestle him to the ground, tase him, and step on his ankle. |
Compensation
$750,000.00 |
Martinsburg, West Virginia | 2020 |
The City of Martinsburg, West Virginia, has agreed to settle an excessive force lawsuit filed by the family of a homeless Black man who was shot and killed by police. Wayne Arnold Jones was shot twenty-two times by Martinsburg police in March 2020. Officers claimed that they shot Jones after he had attacked them violently, and they were not able to restrain him with a stun gun. |
Compensation
$3,500,000.00 |
Tacoma, Washington | 2020 |
The City of Tacoma agreed to an $8 million settlement of a lawsuit filed by a man who was paralyzed during a police shooting in 2011. Officer Kristopher Clark shot Than Orn’s vehicle ten times when Orn tried to swerve around Clark’s patrol car, which was blocking the exit of an apartment building parking lot. After the shooting, Orn was charged with assault on a police officer but was later acquitted of those charges in a jury trial. Orn is now paralyzed from the chest down. |
Compensation
$8,000,000.00 |
New York, New York | 2010 - 2019 |
Between 2010 and 2014, New York City spent $601.3 million on police misconduct cases, and spent nearly $270 million on police misconduct claims in fiscal years 2017 and 2018. In 2015, The Wall Street Journal released an analysis of settlement totals from instances of police misconduct among the ten largest local police departments in the nation. Many of the cases involved in the analysis involved alleged beatings, shootings, and wrongful imprisonment. The analysis determined that, between 2010 and 2014, New York City spent $601.3 million on police misconduct cases. In 2015, the city paid $5.9 million to the estate of Eric Garner, who died after being put in a police chokehold. Additionally, a report released by the New York City Comptroller’s Office disclosed that the city spent nearly $270 million to resolve police misconduct claims in fiscal years 2017 and 2018. A recent analysis of data published by the New York City Law Department, detailing information on civil actions alleging police misconduct, showed that in 2019 the city was responsible for over $68 million in payouts to resolve nearly 1,400 civil lawsuits filed against the department. |
Compensation
$945,200,000.00 |
Miami, Florida | 2010 - 2019 |
In 2015, the City of Miami paid a settlement worth $1 million for an unjustified police shooting, and settled an excessive force lawsuit in 2019 for $65,000. In 2015, The Wall Street Journal released an analysis of settlement totals from instances of police misconduct among the ten largest local police departments in the nation. Many of the cases involved in the analysis involved alleged beatings, shootings, and wrongful imprisonment. The analysis determined that, between 2010 and 2014, Miami-Dade spent $3.1 million on police misconduct cases. In 2015, the City of Miami settled a federal civil rights lawsuit worth nearly $1 million with the family of Travis McNeil, who was shot and killed by police detective Reynaldo Goyos in 2011. In 2019, Miami settled another police misconduct lawsuit for $65,000. The suit had accused Captain Javier Ortiz of the Miami Police Department (who was a lieutenant, and the head of the Miami Police Department’s union at the time of the incident) of using excessive force following a traffic stop in 2015. Sources |
Compensation
$4,165,000.00 |
Allegheny County, Pennsylvania | 2019 |
In 2019, East Pittsburgh reached a $2 million settlement with the family of a man killed in an unlawful shooting. In October 2019, the City of East Pittsburgh in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania reached a $2 million settlement with the family of Antwon Rose, Jr., a 17-year-old who was unarmed when he was killed in a police shooting in 2018. Prior to the finalization of the settlement, the officer was acquitted of criminal homicide. |
Compensation
$2,000,000.00 |
Portland, Oregon | 2019 |
In 2019, Portland agreed to a $10,000 settlement to resolve a police misconduct case. In 2019, the City of Portland agreed to a $10,000 settlement with a woman who accused police of assaulting her with a baton in October 2016. According to local news reports, the woman alleged that officers beat her with the baton on the chest and forearm as she watched a downtown protest. |
Compensation
$10,000.00 |
Indianapolis, Indiana | 2019 |
In 2019, Indianapolis agreed to a settlement worth $2.15 million to resolve a police misconduct case. In June 2019, the City of Indianapolis agreed to a settlement worth $2.15 million for Gerald Cole, who was shot twice in the back by Officer James Perry of the Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department, leaving Mr. Cole partially paralyzed. |
Compensation
$2,150,000.00 |
Charlotte, North Carolina | 2019 |
The Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department has settled several wrongful shooting lawsuits in recent years. The Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department has settled a number of lawsuits in recent years involving wrongful shootings. This includes a $2.25 million settlement following the shooting of Jonathan Ferrell; a $115,000 settlement award to Charlotte teenager Jeffrey Green, who was wounded in a police shooting; and $700,000 paid to the estate of Anthony Wayne Furr, who was working on a cellphone tower when he was fatally shot by police in 2006. |
Compensation
$3,065,000.00 |
San Francisco, California | 2019 |
In March 2019, the San Francisco Board of Supervisors approved a $13.1 million settlement to resolve a police misconduct matter In March 2019, the San Francisco Board of Supervisors approved a police misconduct settlement of $13.1 million to Jamal Trulove, who was wrongly convicted of murder in 2010 and sentenced to 50 years to life in prison. After spending six years in prison, an Oakland jury acquitted Mr. Trulove in a 2015 retrial, which determined that two police officers (who have since retired) fabricated evidence and did not disclose exculpatory material. |
Compensation
$13,100,000.00 |
Honolulu, Hawaii | 2014 - 2019 |
In 2014, Honolulu paid $1.4 million to the family of a man who was suffocated while in police custody, and agreed to a $550,000 settlement in 2019 to remedy misconduct committed by the police chief. In 2014, Honolulu paid $1.4 million to the family of Aaron Torres, who was suffocated while in police custody. In March 2019, the Honolulu City Council agreed to pay $550,000 to a retired police lieutenant to resolve a 2009 lawsuit filed against the Honolulu Police Department regarding the conduct of Police Chief Susan Ballard, who improperly tampered with recruits’ test scores when she oversaw the department’s training division. |
Compensation
$1,955,000.00 |
Tucson, Arizona | 2019 |
Tucson paid a settlement of $300,000 in January 2019 to resolve a police misconduct lawsuit. In January 2019, a family received a settlement total of $300,000 after filing a lawsuit against the City of Tucson and several officers of the Tucson Police Department. The lawsuit accused the officers of detaining members of the Wyatt family, forcing them to lie on the ground after they approached a traffic stop occurring near their home. |
Compensation
$300,000.00 |
Springfield, Massachusetts | 2019 |
A jury awarded Lee Hutchins Sr. of Springfield, Massachusetts, $250,000 after a trial related to a police brutality case. The jury found that one officer used excessive force and the two other responding officers unlawfully entered Hutchins’ home in January 2015 while responding to reports of a domestic disturbance. Hutchins said police pepper-sprayed his eyes and beat him with batons while he was trying to defuse a domestic incident. The jury also found that “the city of Springfield had a custom of failing to discipline officers and this custom demonstrated deliberate indifference to the rights” of citizens. |
Compensation
$249,997.00 |
Baltimore, Maryland | 2010 - 2019 |
Between 2010 and 2014, Baltimore spent $12 million on police misconduct cases; between 2015 and 2019, Baltimore taxpayers paid a total of $24.5 million for police misconduct settlements. In 2015, The Wall Street Journal released an analysis of settlement totals from instances of police misconduct among the ten largest local police departments in the nation. Many of the cases involved in the analysis involved alleged beatings, shootings, and wrongful imprisonment. The analysis determined that, between 2010 and 2014, the City of Baltimore spent $12 million on police misconduct cases. A separate analysis conducted by Baltimore Brew concluded that Baltimore taxpayers paid $24.5 million for police misconduct settlements between fiscal years 2015 and 2019. |
Compensation
$36,500,000.00 |
Phoenix, Arizona | 2008 - 2018 |
Phoenix paid more than $26 million to settle 191 police misconduct claims between fiscal years 2008 and 2018, including $5.6 million paid between 2010 and 2014. In 2015, The Wall Street Journal released an analysis of settlement totals from instances of police misconduct among the ten largest local police departments in the nation. Many of the cases involved in the analysis involved alleged beatings, shootings, and wrongful imprisonment. The analysis determined that, between 2010 and 2014, the City of Phoenix spent $5.6 million on police misconduct cases. A separate analysis using data from the Phoenix Finance Department also reported that between fiscal years 2008 and 2018, the city paid more than $26 million to settle 191 claims of police misconduct. |
Compensation
$26,000,000.00 |
Los Angeles, California | 2005 - 2018 |
Between 2005 and 2018, Los Angeles paid more than $190 million for police misconduct settlements, including $57.1 million paid between 2010 and 2014. In 2015, The Wall Street Journal released an analysis of settlement totals from instances of police misconduct among the ten largest local police departments in the nation. Many of the cases involved in the analysis involved alleged beatings, shootings, and wrongful imprisonment. The analysis determined that, between 2010 and 2014, the City of Los Angeles spent $57.1 million on police misconduct cases. A separate analysis conducted by The Los Angeles Times in 2018 concluded that the city paid more than $190 million for police misconduct settlements from July 2005 to 2018. |
Compensation
$190,000,000.00 |
San Jose, California | 2018 |
In 2018, San Jose paid a $125,000 settlement to five men who were wrongfully arrested for lewd conduct. In 2018, the City of San Jose paid a $125,000 settlement to five men who were arrested for lewd conduct in an undercover operation and ultimately found to be innocent. The investigation that resulted in these charges targeted and discriminated against the gay community. |
Compensation
$125,000.00 |