Excessive Force
Written in plain language for general understanding. This is educational content, not legal advice. Based on federal statutes and official sources.
What is this right?
Police are allowed to use reasonable force to make an arrest, protect themselves, or protect others. But they cannot use more force than necessary. When police use force that goes beyond what the situation requires, it's called excessive force — and it violates your constitutional rights.
The legal standard comes from Graham v. Connor (1989): force must be "objectively reasonable" based on the facts at the moment, not judged with 20/20 hindsight.
When does it apply?
This right applies when:
- Police use physical force against you during an encounter — punching, kicking, tasing, shooting, choking, slamming to the ground
- The force used is disproportionate to the threat you posed
- You are not actively threatening officers or others with serious bodily harm
Common misconceptions:
- "Police can use whatever force they want if I'm resisting" — No. Force must be proportional. Running away from a misdemeanor does not justify deadly force (Tennessee v. Garner, 1985).
- "I can't sue police for using force" — You absolutely can. 42 U.S.C. § 1983 allows lawsuits against officers who violate constitutional rights.
- "If I was breaking the law, police force was justified" — Being suspected of a crime does not waive your right to be free from excessive force.
What should you do?
Step 1: Do not resist. Even if force feels excessive, physical resistance will make the situation more dangerous and give police a justification for escalation.
Step 2: Try to remember details. Badge numbers, patrol car numbers, names if visible, time of day, location, witnesses.
Step 3: Seek medical attention. Go to the ER or urgent care immediately after. Medical records are critical evidence.
Step 4: Document your injuries. Take photos of all injuries on the day of the incident and daily afterward as they develop (bruises darken over days).
Step 5: File a complaint with the police department's internal affairs division. Also file with the city or county civilian oversight board if one exists.
Step 6: Consult a civil rights attorney. Many take excessive force cases on contingency. You may be entitled to compensation under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
What should you NOT do?
Don't fight back. Physical resistance during the encounter makes everything worse — legally and physically. Your recourse is in court.
Don't wait to get medical treatment. Delayed treatment undermines your case. Insurance or not, go immediately.
Don't post on social media about the incident. Anything you post can be used by the officers' defense team. Talk to a lawyer first.
Don't assume nothing can be done. Excessive force lawsuits succeed regularly. Document everything and find a civil rights attorney.
How Connecticut differs from federal law
Connecticut enacted significant police accountability reforms in 2020:
- Public Act 20-1 (Police Accountability Act) limits qualified immunity for officers who use excessive force — Connecticut is one of the few states to address this
- Officers have a duty to intervene when they witness another officer using excessive force
- Use of force must be objectively reasonable and proportional
- Chokeholds are restricted unless deadly force is justified
- Federal § 1983 claims remain available for constitutional violations
- The Inspector General can investigate police use-of-force incidents resulting in death or serious injury
Additional Steps in Connecticut
Report to internal affairs. File with the Office of the Inspector General. For civil rights claims, contact ACLU of Connecticut at (860) 523-9146.
Relevant Law: Public Act 20-1 (Police Accountability Act). Conn. Gen. Stat. § 51-277a (Inspector General). 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
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