The Supreme Court has spent 40 years dismantling the 1971 Bivens precedent that once let Americans sue federal officers for constitutional violations. Renee Nicole Good’s death at the hands of an ICE agent shows the end result: families must navigate a byzantine administrative maze with no jury, narrow categories of compensation, and judges who once prosecuted for the same government they now must challenge.
When ICE agent bullets killed 37-year-old Renee Nicole Good in south Minneapolis on January 7, her family did what grieving relatives have done for half a century: they hired counsel to demand accountability. Within days, prominent civil-rights firm Romanucci & Blandin announced plans to “fervently pursue justice.”
What the firm already knows—and what most Americans don’t—is that the U.S. Supreme Court has spent two generations slamming shut the courthouse doors that once opened for victims of federal misconduct. The result is a legal landscape where:
- Suing a city police officer for excessive force is hard but possible.
- Suing a federal ICE agent for the same conduct is functionally impossible.
The difference is not an accident. It is the product of a deliberate, ideologically driven retreat from the Court’s own 1971 landmark, Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents.
1971: A Brief Window Opens
In Bivens, narcotics agents invaded Webster Bivens’ Brooklyn apartment without a warrant, strip-searched him, and tortured him with a flashlight. The Court recognized an “implied” right to sue federal officers directly under the Fourth Amendment. Chief Justice Warren Burger wrote that constitutional rights would be “mere words” if victims could not seek money damages.
For a decade, lower courts extended Bivens to new contexts—prison abuse, racial discrimination, unlawful surveillance. Then the conservative legal movement counter-attacked.
1980-2022: The Court’s Step-by-Step Retreat
The justices did not overrule Bivens outright; they simply refused to apply it anywhere new. Key moments:
- 1988 – Schweiker v. Chilicky: Court rejects benefits-denial claim, stressing “separation of powers” and calling on Congress to create remedies.
- 2017 – Ziglar v. Abbasi: 5-4 conservative majority refuses to let post-9/11 detainees sue Bush-era officials, demanding “special factors” before expanding Bivens.
- 2020 – Hernández v. Mesa: Border Patrol agent kills Mexican teenager across the border; Court rules cross-border shootings a “new context” barred from Bivens.
- 2022 – Egbert v. Boule: U.S. citizen alleging assault and First-Amendment retaliation near the Canadian border is told to pursue “alternative remedies” instead.
Each decision repeated the same mantra: immigration and national security are “special factors” that counsel hesitation. Translation: if the officer wears a federal badge and the setting involves borders or immigration, Bivens is dead on arrival.
What “Alternative Remedies” Actually Look Like
Unable to sue the agent directly, the Good family must file an administrative claim under the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA). The hurdles are enormous:
- Narrow categories: FTCA compensates only traditional torts—assault, battery, false imprisonment—not every constitutional violation.
- No jury: If the agency denies the claim (or six months pass in silence), suit can proceed only before a federal judge—often a former federal prosecutor—never a citizen jury.
- Discretionary-function shield: Any action labeled “planning level”—including high-speed vehicle interdiction tactics—can be immunized.
- Time and secrecy: Internal investigations, classified evidence, and agency stonewalling can delay resolution for years.
“The process is byzantine and time-consuming,” Romanucci wrote in his public statement. “Most important, a jury of community members will never hear the case.”
Why Immigration Agents Enjoy Extra Armor
Supreme Court doctrine treats border and immigration enforcement as a unique zone where national-security deference outweighs individual rights. The pattern is stark:
| Context | Can you sue the officer? | Can you sue the government? |
|---|---|---|
| City cop uses excessive force | Yes, under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (if you beat qualified immunity) | Sometimes, under Monell claim |
| FBI agent executes wrongful warrant | Rarely; courts invent “special factors” | FTCA only, no jury |
| ICE agent shoots during raid | Practically never | FTCA only, no jury, limited damages |
Emma Winger of the American Immigration Council calls the landscape “a dramatic rise in indiscriminate enforcement, racial profiling, and theater”—all protected by judge-made immunity.
Congress Could Fix This—But Won’t Soon
Democrats have introduced the Bivens Act (H.R. 3009) to extend § 1983-style liability to federal officers. The bill has 42 co-sponsors but zero Republican support. With the GOP controlling the House and Donald Trump back in the Oval Office, passage before 2027 is virtually impossible.
Meanwhile, the Court’s 6-3 conservative super-majority shows no sign of reversing course. Legal scholars predict the justices will soon declare Bivens “obsolete,” replacing it with a blanket rule that victims must seek relief only from Congress—knowing full well that Congress rarely acts.
What the Good Family Faces Next
- File FTCA “Form 95” within two years, detailing assault/battery allegations.
- Wait up to six months for the Department of Homeland Security to admit or deny the claim.
- If denied, sue in federal district court—but only on the tort theory, not the Fourth-Amendment violation, and only before a judge.
- Litigate government motions to dismiss under discretionary-function and qualified-immunity doctrines.
- Accept a settlement or accept a bench verdict—no jury, no punitive damages, no constitutional declaration.
Antonio Romanucci promises to “fervently pursue justice,” yet even he admits the deck is stacked. “We are forced into a process that is designed to protect the federal government, not the citizen victim,” he told reporters.
The Larger Stakes
The Court’s erasure of Bivens coincides with the Trump administration’s expansion of ICE street operations far beyond traditional border zones. In the two weeks surrounding Good’s death, agents shot and wounded two men in Portland and another in Minneapolis, each time claiming self-defense.
Without judicial accountability, those claims are investigated internally, then closed. Body-cam footage, if it exists, is rarely released. Civilian review boards have no jurisdiction. And the only path to transparency runs through the same bureaucracy that pulled the trigger.
Legal scholars warn that the retreat from Bivens is spreading. Last term, the Court declined to extend the remedy to prison guards; next term, it may refuse to apply it to federal Bureau of Land Management rangers or DEA task-force officers. The logic is contagious: anytime the government invokes “national security” or “immigration,” constitutional torts vanish.
Bottom Line
Renee Nicole Good’s death is not just another officer-involved shooting—it is the clearest illustration yet of how the Supreme Court has transformed federal officers into the least accountable police in America. Until Congress or the Court reverses course, the price of constitutional violations by ICE, Border Patrol, or any other federal agent will be paid by victims and taxpayers, while the officers themselves remain shielded from civil judgment.
That is not an unintended loophole. It is the deliberate architecture of modern federal immunity—built brick by brick since 1971, and cemented in place today.
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