Being Wrongfully Arrested in California
I was arrested without cause — here's what California law says and what to do next.
Statute: Cal. Gov. Code § 810 et seq. (California Tort Claims Act); Cal. Civ. Code § 52.1 (Bane Act)
Deadline: 180 days
Penalty: Section 1983 claims have a 2-year statute of limitations in California. The Bane Act (Cal. Civ. Code § 52.1) provides a state civil rights cause of action with treble damages for interference with rights by threats, intimidation, or coercion. The Tom Bane Civil Rights Act allows suits against officers who violate constitutional rights through threats or force
What is being wrongfully arrested?
Police can't arrest you without probable cause — a fact-based reasonable belief that you've committed a crime. An arrest without it is a false arrest and a Fourth Amendment violation. The standard is lower than "beyond reasonable doubt" but higher than a hunch — it's what a reasonable officer, looking at the same facts, would conclude.
Below the arrest line is the Terry stop — a brief investigative detention, named after Terry v. Ohio (1968), that requires only reasonable suspicion of criminal activity. Police can stop and ask questions, and pat you down for weapons if they reasonably believe you're armed and dangerous. They can't stop you just because you "look suspicious," because of your race, or because you refused to answer questions on the street.
What to Do If You Were Arrested Without Probable Cause
Step 1: Find out where you stand. "Am I free to leave?" If no, you're detained. "Am I under arrest?" These two questions clarify the legal posture and create a record on body cam.
Step 2: Don't physically resist. Comply with the body, but say it on the record: "I do not consent to this arrest."
Step 3: Ask the basis. "What is the probable cause for my arrest?" The officer should be able to point to a specific crime. The answer (or lack of one) becomes evidence.
Step 4: Watch the clock. A Terry stop is supposed to be brief — typically 20–30 minutes max. Hold you longer without an arrest, and the stop has likely ripened into an unlawful seizure.
Step 5: After release, document. Names, badge numbers, exact times, witnesses, anything said. File internal affairs and DOJ complaints, and call a civil rights attorney while the details are fresh. § 1983 has a state-borrowed limitations period — often two or three years — but earlier is always better.
How California differs from federal law
California provides strong protections against false arrest:
- California Penal Code § 847(b): Any person who has been arrested and is subsequently released without being charged has a cause of action for false arrest against the arresting officer and employing agency.
- California Civil Code § 52.1 (Bane Act): Allows civil lawsuits with damages for interference with civil rights through threats, intimidation, or coercion — including false arrest.
- Racial profiling ban: AB 953 (2015) — the Racial and Identity Profiling Act (RIPA) — requires law enforcement to collect and report data on every stop, including the perceived race/ethnicity of the person stopped. Agencies found to engage in racial profiling face state intervention.
- No stop-and-identify law: California does not have a stop-and-identify statute. You are not required to show ID to police unless you are being lawfully arrested or are driving a vehicle.
Additional steps in California
File a complaint with the police department's internal affairs division. File a civil lawsuit under Cal. Civ. Code § 52.1 (Bane Act) and/or 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Contact the ACLU of California.
What you should NOT do
Don't run. Even from an unlawful stop, running becomes evidence of consciousness of guilt and triggers extra charges. The Supreme Court in Illinois v. Wardlow (2000) held that flight in a high-crime area can itself be reasonable suspicion.
Don't lie. Silence is your right. False statements to officers — fake name, fake address — are separate misdemeanors or felonies in most states.
Don't argue the law on the street. The officer doesn't decide who's right and the sidewalk is the worst possible courtroom. Save it for your lawyer.
Don't assume you have no proof. Body cams, dash cams, business surveillance, neighborhood Ring cameras, bystander phones. Records often surface late but they surface.
Don't wait — the clock is ticking.
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Generate your police complaint →This page is general legal information for California, not legal advice for your specific situation. Laws change, and how a statute applies depends on facts we don't know. For advice on your matter, consult a licensed attorney in California.