Police Don't Legally Protect You...
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When people say "call the police" during a crisis, they assume protection will follow. But what if I told you the Supreme Court of the United States has ruled — not once, but multiple times — that police officers have no constitutional duty to protect individual citizens?
This isn’t a conspiracy theory. It’s constitutional law.
Take DeShaney v. Winnebago County (1989), a tragic case involving a young boy named Joshua DeShaney who was repeatedly abused by his father. Despite numerous reports and visits from social services, he remained in the home — until he was beaten into a coma. His mother sued, arguing the state failed to protect her son. The Supreme Court, however, ruled that the Constitution does not guarantee the government will shield individuals from private violence. In their words, “The Constitution does not confer an affirmative right to governmental aid.”
Then there’s Castle Rock v. Gonzales (2005). Jessica Gonzales had a court-issued restraining order against her estranged husband. After he kidnapped her three daughters, she called the police multiple times, begging them to act. They didn’t — and the children were later found murdered. She sued the police department for failing to enforce the restraining order. The Supreme Court ruled that she had no constitutional right to enforcement of that order. According to the Court, there is no “entitlement to mandatory enforcement,” even when a judge has signed off on it.
These rulings make one thing clear: the government and its agents — including the police — are not legally obligated to protect you as an individual. Their duty is to the public at large. If the police fail to respond, delay action, or even ignore you completely during a life-threatening situation, they have not necessarily violated your constitutional rights.
This means you can’t sue them under federal law for simply failing to act. Unless their conduct crosses into an active abuse of power — say, violating your rights directly — their inaction is legally protected.
So who protects you?
In reality — you do. And that’s why many Americans argue for the right to self-defense, the value of personal security, and the importance of knowing how to protect yourself and your loved ones. The belief that police are there to guarantee your safety is, unfortunately, just that — a belief. Not a legal promise.
This isn’t a condemnation of every officer. Many serve bravely. But we must be clear about what the law actually says. And what it says is simple: the police have no constitutional duty to protect you. That fact should fundamentally reshape how we think about public safety, civil rights, and self-reliance.
This report was published via Actifit app (Android | iOS). Check out the original version here on actifit.io
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